CREATING PARADISE
The third Earl of Carlisle, by William Aikman. Castle Howard is shown in the background.
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CREATING PARADISE
The third Earl of Carlisle, by William Aikman. Castle Howard is shown in the background.
FRONTISPIECE.
Creating Paradise The Building of the English Country House 1660-1880
RICHARD WILSON and ALAN MACKLEY
Hambledon and London London and New York
Hambledon and London 102 Gloucester Avenue London NWI 8HX 838 Broadway New York NY 10003-4812
First Published 2000 ISBN 1 85285 252 6
© Richard G. Wilson and Alan L. Mackley, 2000 The moral rights of the authors have been asserted All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyrights reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book. A description of this book is available from the British Library and from the Library of Congress. Typeset by Carnegie Publishing, Carnegie House Chatsworth Road, Lancaster, LAI 4SL Printed on acid-free paper and bound in Great Britain by Cambridge University Press
Contents Illustrations
vii
Illustration Acknowledgements
xiii
Abbreviations Preface
xv xvii
1
T h e English Country House
i
2
The Builders of the Country House
3
The Inspiration of Travel
4
Architect and Patron
109
5
A Pleasure Not to be Envied
145
6
T h e Pattern of Building
199
7
T h e Cost of the Country House
233
8
Building and Finance
297
9
Afterword
353
Appendix
361
Notes
365
Index
407
n 47
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Illustrations Plates The third Earl of Carlisle. (From the Castle Howard Collection) 1 The principal country seats in Cheshire. (Kelly, 1892)
ii 6
2 The first Duke of Westminster. (By kind permission of His Grace The Duke of Westminster OBE TD DL)
10
3 Eaton Hall, Cheshire. (By kind permission of His Grace The Duke of Westminster OBE TD DL)
12
4 Edmund Rolfe. (Agnew's)
13
5 Heacham Hall, Norfolk. (Private Collection)
14
6 Viscount Irwin and wife. (Courtauld Institute of Art)
17
7 A page from John Bateman's Great Landowners, 1883
22
8 Byram Park, Yorkshire. (National Monuments Record)
21
9 Claydon House, Buckinghamshire, interior. (The late Edwin Smith)
23
10 Claydon House, Buckinghamshire. (The National Trust Photographic Library)
24
11 Sir Thomas Robinson. (By courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery)
30
12 Rokeby Hall, Yorkshire. (Eddie Ryle-Hodges)
31
13 Houghton Hall, Norfolk. (Mr P.J. N. Prideaux-Brune)
34
14 Houghton Hall, Norfolk. (Houghton Hall andjarrold Publishing)
34
15 The Beauchamp-Proctor family and friends. (Norfolk Museums Service, Norwich Castle Museum)
36
16 Costessey Hall, Norfolk. (Norfolk Studies Library)
37
17 Honing Hall, Norfolk. (National Monuments Record)
38
18 Buckenham Tofts Hall, Norfolk. (Tom Williamson)
41
19 Southill Park, Bedfordshire. (Courtauld Institute of Art)
42
20 Castle Howard, Yorkshire, mausoleum. (From the Castle Howard Collection)
48
21 Wanstead House, Essex. (Giles Worsley and The Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British art)
54
VIII
CREATING
PARADISE
22 Langley Park, Buckinghamshire, plan. (Buckinghamshire Record Office, D31/F/5)
55
23 Langley Park, Buckinghamshire. (British Architectural Library, RIBA, London)
57
24 Weston Longville Hall, Norfolk. (Norfolk Studies Library)
58
25 Lowther Castle, Westmorland. (Morris, II)
61
26 Lynford Hall, Norfolk. (Norfolk Air Photography Library of the Norfolk Museums Service. Derek A. Edwards)
64
27 Lynford Hall, Norfolk, ground floor plan. (Philip Judge)
65
28 Lynford Hall, Norfolk, basement plan. (Philip Judge)
65
29 British connoisseurs in Rome c. 1750. (Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection)
67
30 The Society of Dilettanti. (Courtauld Institute of Art)
69
31 Thomas Coke. (The Earl of Leicester)
71
32 Holkham Hall, Norfolk. (The Earl of Leicester)
73
33 Holkham Hall, Norfolk, statue gallery. (The Earl of Leicester)
74
34 Felbrigg Hall, Norfolk. (The National Trust Photographic Library/ Robert Truman)
75
35 Felbrigg Hall, Norfolk, the cabinet. (The National Trust Photographic Library/ Nadia MacKenzie)
76
36 Felbrigg Hall, Norfolk, picture hanging plan. (The National Trust Photographic Library)
77
37 William Mavor, The British Tourists, title page. (The British Library)
80
38 Castle Howard, Yorkshire, the Orleans room. (Random House)
82
39 Edward Harley, Earl of Oxford. (By courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery)
85
40 Raynham Hall, Norfolk, the state dining room. (Alan Mackley)
87
41 Hagley Hall, Worcestershire. (A. F. Kersting)
90
42 Hagley Hall, Worcestershire, ground floor plan
90
43 Kedleston Hall, Derbyshire. (Courtauld Institute of Art)
93
44 John Byng. (Williamson, 1918)
94
45 Sir Richard Colt Hoare and his son. (Courtauld Institute of Art)
98
46 Baron Hill, Anglesey. (Watts, pi. XI)
99
47 Montagu House, London, interior. (British Architectural Library, RIBA, London)
101
48 Devonshire House, London. (National Monuments Record)
102
49 Stafford House, London, reception
103
ILLUSTRATIONS
IX
50 Chiswick House, Middlesex. (Trustees of Chatsworth Settlement)
106
51 Kirby Hall, Yorkshire. (British Architectural Library, RIBA, London)
no
52 Thorp Arch Hall, Yorkshire, James Paine's plan. (West Yorkshire Archives Service)
112
53 Thorp Arch Hall, Yorkshire, James Paine letter. (West Yorkshire Archives Service) 54 Andrea Palladio, I Quattrolibri Dell'Architettura,
113 frontispiece
117
55 James Wyatt. (The Royal Academy of Arts)
121
56
H e n h a m Hall, Suffolk. (Neale, IV)
122
57
Sir J o h n Soane. (Sir John Soane's Museum)
123
58 James Paine and his son. (The Ashmolean Museum, Oxford)
125
59
D y r h a m Park, Gloucestershire. (John Kip, lyio)
128
60
Blatherwyke Hall, Northamptonshire. (Northamptonshire
Record Office,
BB91/15341)
129
61 Lilburn T o w e r , Northumberland. (Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle upon Tyne)
133
62
138
Bearwood, Berkshire. (A. F. Kersting)
63 T h o m a s Cubitt. (By courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery)
140
64
George Myers. (By kind permission of Hugh Myers)
141
65
Overstone Hall, Northamptonshire. (The Builder, 1862)
144
66
T h o m a s Ripley. (By courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery)
149
67
H e n h a m Hall, Suffolk, clerk of the works's report. (Suffolk Record Office, Ipswich, HAu/Cy/2/3)/3)
151
68
Eshton Hall, Yorkshire. (Morris, III))
152
69
Sheringham Hall, Norfolk, plan. (Repton, 1816)
154
70
Sherborne Hall, Gloucestershire. (Nicholas Kingsley)
155
71 Eaton-by-Congleton Hall, Cheshire. (Cheshire Record Office, D463J) 72
Orchardleigh Park, Somerset, building tradesmen. (Somerset Record Office, DD/DU129)9)
73 East Carlton Hall, Northamptonshire. (Northamptonshire 74
157 161
Record Office)
164
Castle H o w a r d , Yorkshire, doorway of high saloon. (The Country Life Picture Library)))
168
75 W o l t e r t o n Hall, Norfolk. (Private Collection: Photographic Survey, Courtauld Institute of Art)) 76 77
174
W o l t e r t o n Hall, Norfolk, chimney-piece. (Private Collection: Photographic Survey, Courtauld Institute of Art))
173
Carrier's trade card. (Suffolk Record Office, Ipswich, HAii/Cy/1/29)29)
178
£
CREATING
PARADISE
78 Orchardleigh Park, Somerset. (Somerset Record Office, DD/DU 129)
183
79 Brickyard. (Pyne, 1803)
186
80 Kelham Hall, Nottinghamshire. (The Country Life Picture Library)
194
81 Holkham Hall, the old kitchen. (The Earl of Leicester)
196
82 Wentworth Woodhouse, Yorkshire. (The Country Life Picture Library)
200
83 Dingley Hall, Northamptonshire. (National Monuments Record)
207
84 Newby Park, Yorkshire. (Vitruvius Britannicus, III, 1725)
211
85 Ickworth, Suffolk. (The National Trust Photographic Library/Robert Truman)
212
86 Belle Isle, Westmorland. (British Architectural Library, RIBA, London)
212
87 Heveningham Hall, Suffolk, before rebuilding. (British Library, Add 19176, pages: f-ji)
213
88 Heveningham Hall, Suffolk. (Watts, pi XLIII)
214
89 Heath Hall, Yorkshire. (Watts, pi LXXXIV)
215
90 Southill Park, Bedfordshire. (British Architectural Library, RIBA, London)
220
91 Merton Hall, Norfolk. (Norfolk Record Office, WLS XLV/8, 425x2)
223
92 Horseheath Hall, Cambridgeshire. (Vitruvius Britannicus, III, 1725)
227
93 Architect's trade card. (Bodleian Library, University of Oxford MSEng. hist, c.298, fol 2jp) 94 Shotesham Park, Norfolk. (Soane).
230 235
95 Fonthill Abbey, Wiltshire. (British Architectural Library, RIBA, London)
241
96 Design from W. Halfpenny, The Modern Builder's Assistant, 1749.
242
97 Crowcombe Court, Somerset. (A. F. Kersting)
244
98 Brockfield Hall, Yorkshire. (The Country Life Picture Library)
245
99 Haveringland Hall, Norfolk. (Mason, 1865)
250
100 Haveringland Hall, Norfolk, axonometric drawing. (Alan Mackley)
255
101 Tendring Hall, Suffolk. (Soane)
258
102 Stoneleigh Abbey, Warwickshire, interior. (A. F. Kersting)
262
103 Cusworth Hall, Yorkshire. (Doncaster Archives)
265
104 Cusworth Hall, Yorkshire, Chapel. (Doncaster Archives)
266
105 Crewe Hall, Cheshire. (National Monuments Record)
268
106 Wrest Park, Bedfordshire, before rebuilding. (Bedfordshire and Luton Archives and Records Service, L33/21J)
272
107 Wrest Park, Bedfordshire. (Bedfordshire and Luton Archives and Records Service, Z50/104/10) 273 108 Stanford Hall, Leicestershire. (The Country Life Picture Library)
274
ILLUSTRATIONS
XI
109 Shipton Hall, Shropshire. (Julia Ionides)
275
no
Ryston Hall, Norfolk. (Norfolk Studies Library)
276
in
Donington Hall, Leicesteshire, before rebuilding. (Leicestershire, Leicester and Rutland Record Office) 281
112 Harewood House, Yorkshire. (By kind permision of the Earl and Countess ofHarewood and the Trustees of the Harewood House Trust)
284
113 Burley-on-the-Hill, Rutland. (The Country Life Picture Library)
301
114 William Blathwayt. (Dyrham Park, The Blathwayt Collection (The National Trust). Photograph: Photographic Survey Courtauld Institute of Art)
302
115 Castle Howard, Yorkshire. (Vitruvius Britannicus, III, 1725)
307
116 Sir John Griffin Griffin. (English Heritage)
309
117 Audley End, Essex. (English Heritage)
311
118 Audley End, Essex, the little drawing room. (English Heritage) 119 Sledmere House, Yorkshire, Sir Christopher Sykes's design. (The Country Life Picture Library)
312 314
120 Sledmere House, Yorkshire, the library. (Courtauld Institute of Art)
315
121 Sir Christopher and Lady Sykes. (Courtauld Institute of Art)
318
122 Edwin Lascelles. (By kind permission of the Earl and Countess ofHarewood and the Trustees of the Harewood House Trust)
323
123 Dodington Park, Gloucestershire. (A. F. Kersting)
325
124 Orchardleigh Park, Somerset, the old and n e w houses. (Somerset Record Office, DD/DU 129)
328
125 Charles Sabine Augustus Thellusson. (Engish Heritage)
330
126 Brodsworth Hall, Yorkshire. (English Heritage)
331
127 Brodsworth Hall, Yorkshire, drawing-room. (English Heritage)
332
128 Denton Hall, Yorkshire. (Neale, V)
334
129 Hovingham Hall, Yorkshire. (Giles Worsley)
337
130 Strelley Hall, Nottinghamshire. (Nottinghamshire Archives)
344
131 Strelley Hall, Nottinghamshire, plan. (Nottinghamshire Archives: DDE46/60/4)
345
132 Paradise, Gloucestershire. (Nicholas Kingsley)
352
133 Cliveden House, Buckinghamshire. (Viscount Astor)
358
134 Belhus, Essex. (National Monuments Record)
360
XII
CREATING
PARADISE
Figures 1 The movement of materials for the building of a country house: Henham, 1792-98
182
2 Chronology of country house building, 1660-1880
205
3 Chronology of alterations to country houses, 1660-1880
221
4 Estimating the cost of building country houses: the variation of cost per cubic foot with house size and date
291
5 Estimating the cost of building country houses: the variation of total cost with house size and date
291
Tables 1 Peak numbers of men employed building Haveringland Hall, 1839-42
163
2 The cost of making brick
189
3 Pattern of landownership: percentage of county acreages owned by categories of landowner
204
4 Building chronology, 1660s to 1870s: new and rebuilt houses in each decade by county for owners of more than 3000 acres nationally
206
5 Percentage of datable houses built before 1800
208
6 The building of new houses, 1690-1729
209
7 The building of new houses, 1770-99
210
8 The building of new houses, 1850-79
216
9 The cost of building Denton Hall, Yorkshire, in the 1770s
237
10 The cost of English country houses, c. 1830-1914
246
11 The cost of building Haveringland Hall, Norfolk, 1839-42
252
12 The percentage cost of labour, materials and carriage in the construction of country houses, 1670-1875
256
13 The cost of building Tendring Hall (Suffolk), 1784-88
260
14 Estimates for the cases and finishing of country houses, 1748-1856
263
15 Country house unit building costs, 1670-1870
290
16 Comparison of actual and predicted building costs
292
17 Estimated average cost of country houses by estate size, 1770-1800
294
18 The expenditure of Sir John Griffin Griffin Bt, 1762-97
310
19 The income and expenditure of Sir Christopher Sykes Bt, 1787-1800
316
20 Expenditure on the building of Dodington (Gloucestershire)
326
21 Comparison of building expenditure with rental income
347
Illustration Acknowledgements The authors and the publisher wish to thank the following for their kind permission to reproduce figures and plates: Messrs Agnew's, 4; the Ashmolean Museum, 58; Viscount Astor, 133; Bedfordshire Record Office, 106-107; the Bodleian Library, 93; Buckinghamshire Record Office, 22; the British Architectural Library, Royal Institute of British Architects, 23, 47, 51, 86, 90, 95; the British Library, 37, 87; the Castle Howard Collection, frontispiece, 20; the Trustees of the Chatsworth Settlement, 50; Cheshire Record Office, 71; The Marquess of Cholmondeley, 14; Country Life, 74, 80, 82, 98, 108, 113, 119; the Courtauld Institute of Art, 6, 19, 30, 43, 45, 75-76,114,120-121; Doncaster Archives, 103-104; Mrs Freda English, 5; English Heritage, 116-118, 125-127; English Heritage, National Monuments Record, 17, 24, 48, 83, 134; Mrs Jane Fenner-Fust, 132; The Earl of Harewood, 112, 122; Julia Ionides, 109; Mr Philip Judge, 27-28; Mr Anthony Kersting, 41, 62, 97, 102, 123; Mr Nicholas Kingsley, 70, 132; the Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle upon Tyne, 61; the Earl of Leicester, 31-33, 81; Leicestershire Record Office, in; The Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British art, 21; Mr Hugh Myers, 64; the National Portrait Gallery, 11, 39, 63, 66; the National Trust, 10, 34-36, 59, 85, 114, 133; Norfolk Air Photography Library, Derek A. Edwards, 26; Norfolk Museums Service (Norwich Castle Museum), 15; Norfolk Record Office, 91; Norfolk Studies Library, 16, no; Northamptonshire Record Office, 60, 73; Nottinghamshire Record Office, 130-131; Sir William Pennington-Ramsden Bt, 8; Messrs Phillips, 105; Mr P. J. N. Prideaux-Brune, 13; Random House, 38; the Royal Academy of Arts, 55; Mr Eddie Ryle-Hughes, 12, ; Viscount Scarsdale, 43; Mrs Olive Smith, 9; the Trustees of Sir John Soane's Museum, 57; Somerset Record Office, 72, 78, 124; the Earl of Stradbroke, 67, 77; Sir Tatton Sykes, Bt, 120-121; The Marquess Townshend of Raynham, 40; the University of East Anglia, (Mr Michael Brandon-Jones), 1, 7, 25, 42, 44, 46, 49, 54, 65, 68-69, 79, 84, 88-89, 92, 94, 96, 101, 115; Lord Walpole, 75-76; the West Yorkshire Archives Service, Leeds, 52-53; the Duke of Westminster, 2-3; Mr S. C. Whitbread, 19, 90; Dr Tom Williamson, 18; Dr Giles Worsley, 21, 129; Yale Center for British Art, 29.
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Abbreviations BL
British Library
BPP
British Parliamentary Papers
DNB
Dictionary of National Biography
HMC
Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts
Mason
R. H. Mason, Norfolk Photographically Illustrated (Norwich, 1865)
Morris
F. O. Morris, A Series of Picturesque Views of Seats of the Noblemen and Gentlemen of Great Britain and Ireland, 6 vols (London, 1880)
Neale
J. P. Neale, Views of the Seats of Noblemen and Gentlemen in England, 6 vols (London, 1818-23)
Pyne
W. H. Pyne, The Microcosm of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (London, 1803)
RCHME
Royal Commission on The Historical Monuments of England
Repton
Humphry and John Adey Repton, Fragments on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening (London, 1816)
Rutter
John Rutter, Delineations ofFonthill Abbey, (1823)
Soane
Sir John Soane, Plans, Elevations and Sections of Buildings Executed in the Counties of Norfolk, Suffolk, Yorkshire, Staffordshire, Warwickshire, Hertfordshire, et caetera (London, 1788).
Watts
William Watts, The Seats of the Nobility and Gentry (London, 1779)
Williamson G. C.Williamson, Life and Works of Ozias Humphrey R.A. (London, 1918)
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Preface The country house was the creation of large landowners. In the period we discuss, 1660-1880, they prospered, dominating local and national government alike. They were the chief beneficiaries of the prolonged expansion of the British economy in these years, a growth based upon agricultural as well as industrial progress. Their outlook in general therefore was one of unbroken confidence. This optimism and the power that they shared were above all expressed in the country house. Our book, however, is not restricted to the great territorial magnates and their palaces which have hitherto dominated country house literature. English landowners were a varied group. We look at the building activities of the whole gamut, from the fabulously rich and grand to the small country squire whose estate and income barely sustained his standing at county level. The paradise they sought to create was not only achieved through the endeavours of themselves and their architects, but also of the various craftsmen and labourers who turned their visions into reality. These visions of course included gardens and parks as well as houses. But it is the country house - the centre-piece of a formidable statement being made about wealth, authority and status - with which we are principally concerned. It is the whole process of their construction which we therefore attempt to encompass, from the young Grand Tourist's thrill at first viewing Palladio's sunlit villas in the Veneto to the time, often decades later, when he moved his family into a big, new, somewhat chilly home in the English countryside. Studies of the country house are numerous. They embrace wares of many descriptions: beautifully illustrated surveys of houses, their architecture and architects; serious monographs; erudite National Trust booklets to its properties, and guide books to every house open to the public; the century-long series of Country Life articles and publications devoted to the British country house. Life in them across the centuries is captured in accounts of owners and servants alike. We bring a different approach. This is a book not about architects and architecture of country houses but about their builders and building. It attempts to
XVIII
CREATING
PARADISE
provide the economic and social context of a remarkable creative phenomenon. At its heart is a study of building accounts, at least those surviving in reasonable completeness. From them it introduces practical and financial dimensions to the field of country house studies, one hitherto dominated by the stylistic and aesthetic concerns of architectural historians. Some of the research for the book was undertaken with an Economic and Social Research Council grant (R000221311), and we are indebted to the assessors of our final report to the Council for their perceptive appraisals. A version of chapter seven appeared in the Economic History Review (1999). We are grateful to the editors and those of the Georgian Group Journal and Norfolk Archaeology for their
permission to reproduce material which was published in their journals, and now appears here rewritten and pruned. We have profited enormously from the comments of Dr Malcolm Airs, Dr Bill Mathew and Professor Michael Thompson who kindly read our manuscript. Our colleagues in the School of History at the University of East Anglia, especially Dr Tom Williamson as always bursting with ideas about houses and landscapes, have given us advice and encouragement, as have those scholars in other universities where we have presented papers about our research. Many people have helped us during the past half dozen years and we would particularly like to express our gratitude to Dr John Barney, Dr Ian Gordon Brown, Brett Harrison, Michael Brandon-Jones, Philip Judge, Nicholas Kingsley, the Earl of Leicester, Anthony Mitchell, Norman Scarfe, Sir Tatton Sykes, Jenni Tanimoto, the Marquess Townshend of Raynham, Lord and Lady Walpole, Mavis Wesley, Sam Whitbread, Edmund Wilson and Dr Giles Worsley. We would also like to thank the staffs of the Berkshire, Cheshire, Dorset, Gloucestershire, Leicestershire, Norfolk, Northamptonshire, Nottinghamshire, Somerset and Suffolk Record Offices, the West Yorkshire Archives Service and the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, for their expertise and assistance. In the task of collecting illustrations Dr Jane Cunningham and Melanie Blake in the Photographic Survey Department of the Courtauld Institute were especially helpful. Martin Sheppard, our publisher, guided the book through all the stages of production, calmly and efficiently. Our wives, Marian and Ursula, enjoying many excursions to country houses, remained amazingly uncomplaining about our neglect of them and their gardens during the other, more protracted stages of research, writing and revision.
'When one lives in Paradise, how hard it must be to ascend in heart and mind to Heaven.7
Lady Frederick Cavendish, writing of Cliveden, Buckinghamshire, in 1863.
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1
The English Country House Vita Sackville-West began her little book English Country Houses in the Britain in Pictures series, 'There is nothing quite like the English Country House anywhere else in the world ... it may be large, it may be small; it may be manorial; it may be the seat of aristocracy or the home of the gentry'. And, writing in 1944, she unsurprisingly and gloomily concluded with the question, 'One wonders for how long?'l But the point about their variety is a valid one, evident even now when a significant proportion of the houses which flourished in her youth have been demolished, reduced in size or put to other uses.2 She opined with a mounting, unfettered run of generalities (Vanbrugh's oeuvre especially got short shrift), that 'the English are a rural-minded people on the whole'. Whereas 'our cities generally speaking are deplorable', English villages and country houses were the inheritors of a different tradition and spirit. Again, the contrast she invoked has been an important one in English history. Certainly, no part of this vision, so wilfully failing to encompass Britain's industrial and urban heart land, has been a more potent reminder of our past than the country house. Physically, powerfully, they continue to expound to us the key role played by their owners in politics, in taste and culture, and in the development of the landscape across the past four centuries. As a consequence, historians and writers of every hue continue to produce a varied and ever-burgeoning literature about them. Its more academic segment consists of two main sectors, one provided by historians of architecture, the other by those writing about landownership more generally. The architectural historians, who traditionally have supplied the better end of the market, are naturally preoccupied with styles, architects and craftsmen, and the relationship between architecture and other arts, literature, painting and landscape gardening. With a few notable exceptions, they have not been very interested in linking the evolution of the country house to the economic and social history of landownership.3 Often houses are treated in isolation, like the vast, century-old series of Country Life articles, a house in Cumbria one week, another in Essex the next; or presented,
2
CREATING
PARADISE
as in Pevsner's immensely influential Buildings of England series, as entries providing erudite guides for the educated sightseer but which contain hardly a word about their builders or costs. In this literature the builders of country houses are represented as an implausibly uniform class. Their finances and economic prospects especially are almost totally ignored, the pace and scale of building activity is passed over. At worst, the same examples of architectural distinction are paraded time after time. We begin to see the world of the country house in the two centuries after the Restoration through the lenses of Blenheim and Castle Howard, Holkham and Houghton. It is a Brideshead Revisited view of the English county house in which the sheer variety of their size and the scale of their numbers is ignored. The agenda of the historians of landownership in the period between 1660 and 1880 period is very different.4 Basically, they are faced with the task of explaining a paradox of great significance in English history. How, in an economy increasingly driven by industrial and commercial forces, did the landed class retain their traditional influence past 1832 into the last quarter of the nineteenth century? Did their political authority, their embrace of the country's industrial and financial leaders, mean a faltering of Britain's early economic supremacy? How easily did the progressive British economy, in contrast to that of the southern states of America for example, carry the weight of a traditional seigneurial class? The accounts of historians attempting to answer these big questions have concentrated upon issues such as the growth in the size of the landed estate, especially between the 1720s and its apogee in the mid Victorian period, and the absorption (or otherwise) of newcomers into the landowners' ranks. Contrariwise, they have also elucidated the ways in which some landowners themselves were increasingly involved in the processes of industrial, urban and transport developments as well as of agrarian improvement. In this literature analysing the growing wealth and survival of English landowners, the specific aspects of country house building have been relatively neglected in the attempt to explain the complex and varied growth of estates over a long period. Again there has been a tendency amongst historians of landownership to cite the atypical example, those wonder houses whose construction was pivotal in the development of architectural styles and sometimes crucial in the fate of individual family fortunes. There is a need therefore to examine the full compass of country house building in its golden age between 1660 and 1880 in terms of numbers, activity, distribution and costs. Sir John Summerson, forty years ago, stated the position succinctly:
THE ENGLISH
COUNTRY HOUSE
3
'Nobody, I believe, has attempted to estimate the number of country houses built, the amount of money spent on them, or their distribution throughout the Kingdom - elementary desiderata, surely, if country house building is to be considered historically.' The difficulties of providing an acceptable estimate of costs and numbers, however, even in the second half of the nineteenth century when the evidence becomes fuller, are forbidding, and the literature provides little guide even as a starting point. Sir John himself performed some rather vague calculations about 150 great houses built between 1710 and 1740. He found one-third were built in the five years between 1720 and 1724. But he felt unable to pin-point the causes of this concentration. He offered two explanations, The latent stylistic factors' of the new Palladianism and 'remote causes ... embedded in economic and social history [which] cannot be dealt with here'.5 Subsequently, attention has been drawn to the importance of the subject in relation to capital formation in the eighteenth century. Although acknowledging the pole position of landowners, profiting handsomely from agrarian improvement, historians have not found the task easy either in establishing a chronology of country house building or the scale of spending on them: 'No attempt has so far been made to establish a chronology of stately home investment, and the task may turn out to be virtually impossible, bearing in mind the difficulty of dating the many hundred, if not thousands of houses involved, as well as of establishing at this distance of time the total expenditure on each building.'6 Back-of-the-envelope calculations from Pevsner's Buildings ofEngland series, and a more intensive sampling, have suggested that in the two centuries after the Restoration peak activity seems to be concentrated in two periods, the 1690s to the 1730s, and the 1790s to the 1830s.7 The territory of expenditure remains uncharted. Our agenda of calculating numbers and costs, of defining periods of activity across two centuries, of examining the economic history of the English country house as a whole is then, as others have outlined, a tough one.8 This book attempts to provide some answers by looking at the phenomenon across England, the core of the work being a detailed study of six counties, Cheshire, Gloucestershire, Norfolk, Northamptonshire, Suffolk, and Yorkshire.9 The choice is neither random nor watertight. Different factors weighed in our attempt to provide a reasonable cross-section of England: convenience (Norfolk and Suffolk); our existing knowledge (Yorkshire); a good secondary literature (Cheshire, Gloucestershire and Northamptonshire). Mainly we have looked at surviving building accounts (full sets are rare) within the context of the number of houses built between 1660 and
4
CREATING
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1880. It has also entailed assimilating a wide range of material: estate and family records; the views of numerous contemporaries who visited and wrote about country houses; and some of the vast literature on architecture and landownership. It is necessary to say something about the use of the word 'builder' and attempt to define what we mean by 'country house'. Neither task is as straightforward as it seems. Who was the builder? Indeed, who was the architect? One dictionary defines 'builder' as follows: 'builder now equals master artisan, who is instructed by the architect, and employs the manual labourers'.10 The term was not used in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in this way. At the start of our period, the various forms of organising the building of the country house preclude the application of a strict definition to the terms builder or architect. With the increasing specialisation of roles this changed. In the eighteenth century the professional architect emerged from the ranks of gentlemen-designers, craftsmenbuilders and the trained officials of the Office of Works. By 1830 the codification of the architect's relationship with his clients created the professional we would recognise today. As the scope of the architect's role increased, hitherto autonomous craftsmen became subservient to a single controlling designer. During the nineteenth century the responsibilities of master craftsmen for the employment and management of men within their own crafts shifted to general building contractors, as building by contract replaced individual craft agreements and directly recruited workforces. Consequently the meaning of the terms architect and builder changed and depend upon context. For example, Thomas Coke (1697-1759), first Earl of Leicester, was the architect, client and builder of Holkham Hall, one of the greatest houses of its age. Yet he cannot possibly be confused with an artisan 'builder', whether an individual or the manager of the construction process. Nor did he perform the same role as a professional architect a century later, boasting a portfolio of clients, responsible for the design of a building, the preparation of specifications and bills of quantities, the recommendation of a contractor, and the overall supervision of construction. A lack of precision in the use of the labels architect and builder simply reflects the problem that they describe activities which changed over time. We, however, use the term 'builder of the country house' to mean the client or patron. What we now think of as builders we refer to as 'master craftsmen' - masons, joiners, plasterers etc. - in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and, increasingly, as building contractors in the Victorian period.
THE
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5
The second question, 'What do we mean by a country house?', similarly defies precise definition. Saturated in our heritage and armed with National Trust membership, we all know in our mind's eye: a large, old house with numerous outbuildings, surrounded by gardens and park, the main residence, at least historically, of a sizeable landed estate - a statement of exclusiveness and authority, of expense and status. Yet these are imprecise considerations when divorced from definitions of estate size or income. Whereas, for example, Bateman identified 183 estates of over one thousand acres in size in Norfolk in the 1870s, Burke's and Savills Guide to Country Houses of 1981 - even after the demolition of at least twenty-seven large houses and the wholesale breakup of estates in the intervening century - lists no fewer than 450 country houses.11 It is clear that its compilation was imperceptibly influenced by forty years of escalating house prices and estate agents' hype, by the fact that the old gentry, where they survive, often live in smaller houses in the later twentieth century, and many pre-1700 manor houses which abound in Norfolk have only recently come back into the country house repertoire with their refurbishment. Nowhere is the amount of land attached to them disclosed. Entries therefore do not necessarily constitute a list of country houses which would have been recognised as such in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The Guide goes well down the scale into those domains beloved by estate agents - the old rectory. When we turn to Victorian directories (Plate 1), or the numerous editions of Walford's County Families of the United Kingdom, for their listing of 'the Seats of the Nobility, Gentry and Clergy', we find these are not necessarily more helpful: both compilations tend to record houses of the magistracy which, even in the 1840s, when county membership of the bench was almost entirely confined to the gentry and clergy, was not the same thing as a list of country houses.12 Essentially, the directories and Walford are recording membership of the county community (including many 'superior' clergy and some urban plutocrats), not providing an accurate catalogue of either country houses or estates in any given year. For the construction of an objective database of country houses the options are limited. To confine ownership of them to the titled aristocracy is much too exclusive. And status as defined by Gregory King in the 1690s and by subsequent political economists, in an attempt to calculate the size and incomes of the titled and gentry classes, founders on estimates of the number of 'gentlemen' and, at least for our purposes, fails to take account of the crucial relationship between
CREATING PARADISE
7
LIST OF THE
PEIICIPAL SEATS IN CHESHIKE, Witli Reference to the Places under which they will be found in this Volume.
PAG 13
PAOK
Abbots Moss, Hon. Mrs, Cholmondeley, seo Marlon ... 353 Broxton Old hall, William Graham Crum esq. J.P. seo Aeresbank, Ralph Bates esq, j.p. see Stalybridge 435 Broxton 46 Adlington hall, Mrs. Legh, see Adlington 18 Buglawton hall, Samuel Pearson esq. see Buglawton ... 171 Agden hall, Charles Lister esq. J.P. see Agden 159 Bnrland ball, Miss Button, see Burland 17 Alderley park, Lord Stanley of Alderley, see Alderley... 19 Burton hall, Wtn, Congreve esq, DX., J.F. see Burton 174 Aidersey hall, Thomas Aldersey esq. see Aldersoy 234 Butley hall, William Coare Brocklehurat esq. J.P. see Appleton hall, Thomas fly. Lyon osq. J.P. see Appleton 31 Butley < 398 Apsley cottage, Lieut.-Col. Samuel Wright Wilkinson Galdy manor, Alfred Bavton esq. J.F. see Caldy 306 J.P. see Stockport 452 Calveley hall, Mrs. H. R. Peel, seeCalveley 172 Arderne hall, Earl of Haddington, see Tarporley 482 Capenhurst hall, Bichard Tasweil Richardson esq. J.P. Arley hall, PiersEgerton-Warburton esq. J.P. see Astonsee Capenhurst 17S by-Budworth..," 35 Capesthorne hall,William Bromley-Darenport esq. u.v., Arrowe hail, Fredk. Jas. Harrison esq. J.P. see Arrowe 512 | J.P. see Capesthorne i 176 Ashbrook hall, Mrs. Brooke, see Church Minshull 233 Carden park, John Hurleston Leche esq. D.L., J.P. see Ashfield, Thomas Collier esq. J.T>. see Chester 229 Carden 489 Ashtield, Joshua O. Nicholson esq. J.P. see Upton 400 I Carlett park, Hev. Wm. Edward Torr M.A see Easthara 264 Ashfield hall, Uvedale Corbett esq. M.A., J.P. see Great j Cassia lodge, Oswald Moseley Leigh esq. J.P. seeMarton 353 Neston 37a ! Castle park, Misses Wright, see Netherton 275 Ashford, Wm. Wyeliffe Barlow esq. J.P. see Fulshaw ... 508 Cedar Lawn, Major John Rd\ Pickmere J.P. see Thelwall 487 Ashton Hayes, William Hayes es,q. see Ashtoa 34 Cedars (The), Jamea Maddock J.P. see Alsagw 21 Astle hall, Lieut.-Col. George Dixon J.P. see Chelford... 180 I Cherry hill, SI. Hy. Sandbach esq, J.P. see Cuddington 347 Aston hall, Hervey Talbot esq. sec Out ton 315 ! Cholmondeley Castle, John Henry Gartside esq. see Aston lodge, James Geo. Best esq. see Aston-by-Sutton 36! Cholmondeley 34^ Bache hall, Mrs. Hudson, see Bache 38 ! Ghorlton hall, V'rederick Dresser esq. see Chorlton 38 Backford hall, Birkenhead G!e<jg esq. see Baokford 38 \ Christleton hall, Mrs. Ince, see Christleton 231 Bank house, Robt. Oliver Orton esq. J.P. see Tatteuhall 486 I Church Lawton hall, William Laurence Chew esq. J.P. Beach cottage, Saml, Outram Hermon esq. see Hartford 283 \ seo Church Lawton 232 Bewsonhurst, Henry Reynolds esq. J.P. see Netherton ... 276 j Cliffe (The), Sir Henry Fox u.r., F.E.G.S. see Hough ... 517 Beeches (The), Wm. Dickson Houghton esq. see Moore 250 Cogshall hall, John Highfiekl esq. see Cogshall 169 Beechfield, GoorgsC. Greenwell esq. J.P. see Poynton... 397 Combonnore Abbey, Viscount Combermeve J.P. see 1 Beochliekl, George Gordon McUae esq. J.!\ see Hartford 283 Barley Dam 74 Beech wood, Geo. Charnley Oewhurst esq. J.P. sea Lymm 322 Copley.StephetiWilliatnson esq.M.y.see'i'hornton-Hough 487 Birtles hall, John Brooks Close Brooks esq. see Over j Corbrook house, Thomas Latham Boote esq. J.P. see Alderley 20 | Audlem.... 36 Birtles Old hall, Mrs. Frank Hibbert,, see Birtles 398 j Crag hall, Francis Wm. Ashton esq. see Wildboarclough 504 Bolesworto Castle, George Barbour esq. M.A,, D.r,., j.p. I Grannie hall, Eobert Miller esq. see Cranage 240 see Broxton 46 Cresswellsha-vve, Francis Henry Randle Wilbraham esq. • Boiling. (The), Lord Dudley, see Malpas 346 J.P. see Alsager 21 Boms hall, James Thomas Dorrington esq. see Butley... 398 Crewe hall, Lord Crewe, see Crnwe 242 Boothfield house, Edward Lewis Asuworth esq. J.P. see Crewe hill, Mrs. Barnston, see Crewe 273 Over Knutsworth 311 Cringle house.Tbomas HardcastleSykesj..P.see Cbeadlo Bostock hall, Col. Charles HoskeiiFrance-Hayhurst D.I,., Bulkeley !77 J.P. see Bostock 251 Crofton lodge, Samuel Beckett Chadwick esq. J.P. see Botha-ms hall, James Kirk esq. j.p. see Yeardsley-cumRuncorn ~ . • 4°8 Whaley 519 Crowton house, Rev. Charles William Spencer-Stanhope Boughton hall, Col. William Vesey Brownlow C.B. see M.A. see Crowton :.,'.... 249 Great Booghton 162 Cuddington hall, Thomas Brassey esq. see Cuddington 346 Boxes (The), Lieut.-Col. John Sprot Tait D.I,., J.P.'see Daisy Bank, Dennis Bradwell esq. J.P. see Huline Hartford 284 Waltteld • =93 Bramhall hall, Chas. Hy. Nevill esq. j.p. see Bramhall 165 Dale (The), Miss Massey, see Moston 36a Bredbury ball, James Edward Mills esq. see Bredbury 166 Daresbury hall, Robert Iorwerth Wynne-Jones esq. see2 Brereton hall, John Moir esq. see Brereton 167 Daresbury 49 Briimington Manor house, James Leigh esq. J.P. see Darnhallhall,WilliamHenry Verdin esq.J.r.see Darnhall 392 Brinnington 468 DaTenham hall, Christopher Kay esq. D.L., J.P. sea2 X Brockhurst (The), Joseph Verdin esq. D.L., J.P. seo Davenham 5 Danebridge ; 38s Davenport hall, Misa Tippinge, see Davenport 480 Bromborough hall, Robert Norris Dale esq. see BromDavenshaw house, Capel Wilson Hogg esq. J.P. seeX l borough 168 Buglawton ••••• 7 Brook house,Wm.PhilipBrabazonesq.M.D.,j.p. seeLymm 322 Delamere house, Roger William Wilbraham esq. J.P. Brookbank, Edward Hibbert esq. J.P. see Godley 302 see Cuddington 499 Brookdale, James Jardine esq. ».L., J.P, see Chester ... 229 DoddinRton hall, Louis Delves Broughton esq. see Brookfield, Edmund Howard Sykes J.P. see Cheadle Doddington » 2SS BuSkeley 177 Dor fold hall, Henry James Tollemache esq. M.P., J.P. r Brookside, Major John Kennedy J.P. see Arclid 431 see Acton 7
1. The definition of principal country seat used in nineteenth-century directories, as in this list from Kelly's 1892 edition for Cheshire, embraced many that were not associated with significant landed estates. PLATE
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land and country house ownership. Two other choices remain: the size of house and size of estate. It is the latter we have chosen to define the country house.13 It was an approach first delineated by Michael Thompson.14 He subjected the Return of Owners of Land (the celebrated New Domesday of 1873 which tells us more about the structure of land ownership than at any other point in our history), and the subsequent verification of the holdings of 'Great Landowners' by John Bateman, to careful analysis.15 He found there were 363 great estates of more than 10,000 acres, around 1000 'greater gentry' owning between 3000 and 10,000 acres, and some 2000 'squires' with between 1000 and 3000 acres. Together this tiny population of landowners owned an incredible 53.5 per cent of England. They all enjoyed annual incomes in excess of £1000 which was thought to be the minimum necessary to support the lifestyle of a landed gentleman. A figure therefore of around 5000 country houses - some of the largest landowners owning more than one and some aristocrats several - is probably not far from the total of English country houses if we firmly link the country house to defined amounts of land and income. There are, of course, obvious drawbacks with this estimation. There are problems at the margin. First, there were some few landholdings of more than 1000 acres which supported no country house. Secondly, there were many estates of less than 1000 acres which nevertheless did include a sizeable country house, because their owners derived, especially by the nineteenth century, the major part of their incomes from non-landed sources. A key group here were the new rich, principally those who continuously from the 1690s derived their fortunes from industry, trade and finance. Did they buy big estates and houses or were they content with, at most, a few hundred acres, happy to live a country life in miniature? Before the great depression in agriculture (1873-96), most of the richest new men did buy landed estates; but there were also increasing numbers of plutocrats who often lived more comfortably than the old gentry in houses that were not the centre of a fully-fledged landed estate.16 Certainly, the major part of the new men's incomes was not derived from land rentals. They nevertheless enjoyed almost all of a landed estate's amenities, sizeable and stylish homes, with immaculate gardens, extensive hot-houses and stables, all surrounded by neat small parks. Benjamin Gott (1761-1840), one-time cloth merchant and the first large-scale factory owner in the Leeds woollen industry, typifies this kind of owner and house.17 In 1803 he bought a modest Georgian house with 200 acres
8
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of land from another merchant at Armley on the edge of Leeds. He engaged Sir Robert Smirke to build him a stylish villa in the latest Grecian style, and Humphry Repton to set out a landscape park on an unpromising site with a distant view of the smoke-laden town. He rilled his house with fine paintings and the sculptures of a distant cousin in Rome, Joseph Gott. Half a century later the family owned 770 acres around Leeds. Their holding was never a country estate, but Armley was a fine house where the family resided until the late 1920s, as large as, and certainly better furnished and maintained, than the majority of those owned by the Yorkshire squirearchy. By the mid nineteenth century there were hundreds of men like Gott, eager to display their wealth and taste, occupying houses similar to, if less stylish than, Armley. Most larger towns were surrounded by their villas. As J. A. Houseman observed in 1800: 'merchants frequently accumulated very large fortunes, if we may judge from their many and elegant seats with which the neighbourhood of Leeds is studded'.18 A map of Norfolk parks of about 1880 shows a marked concentration around Norwich (a lesser engine of wealth creation than Leeds by the early nineteenth century), largely accounted for by the establishments of the city's richest families.19 Yet there was nothing novel about them. Well-kept villas were a feature of the English landscape when Celia Fiennes and Daniel Defoe made their tours in the 1690s and 1720s. Of course these suburban villas especially proliferated close to London. Defoe wrote of them: fI find 2000 houses which in other places would pass for Palaces ... in a word, nothing can be more Beautiful [than] these Villages fill'd with these Houses, and the Houses surrounded with Gardens, Walks, Vistas, Avenues, representing all the Beauties of Building, and all the Pleasures of Planting/20 Yet contemporaries made a clear distinction between the true country house and the house in the country. They recognised that a country house required a sufficient landed estate to pay for its upkeep, and that it must possess tenanted land indicating an intention to use the house as a source of influence in the local community. Only from the mid nineteenth century did these definitions break down as new money flowed into the countryside. The sizeable houses they built were used primarily for recreation and for the entertainment of family and business associates. Clearly these establishments, the home of a rich and often transient gentry, are a problem in discussing the composition of landed society and in the definition of the country house. But so long as the association of the house with a precisely determinable size of landed estate is maintained, a figure of around
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9
5000 such houses is a reasonable estimate. The chief strength of the method is that it identifies the country house with its surrounding tenanted farms, cottages and all the other appurtenances of a large landed estate. Thus it is defined by its role and purpose as family seat, 'power house' and community focus. For our purposes, examining the numbers and wealth of landowners as potential country house builders under three heads, the peerage, the landed gentry, and newcomers to the latter, is instructive, allowing for the above strictures (and many more in the voluminous literature on landowners) about rigid categorisation.21 We consider the development and meaning of the country house, and those influences which motivated their builders - the pressures of a highly emulative and consumer-driven society, the impact of the Grand Tour, the constant peer group appraisal of houses in England, and the increasing tendency for them to spend long periods in London. The roles of the builders of country houses changed as the architectural profession gradually emerged. At the Restoration the former's position in design and construction was pivotal; by the third quarter of the nineteenth century they simply went to an architect and building contractor with their requirements. We examine the process of building a country house, looking at the key function of the clerk of the works, of workforces more generally, and at the procurement of materials and their transport. A more difficult topic inevitably statistical in its dimensions - is the pattern of country house building activity across two centuries and the extent of regional variations. Lastly we attempt to answer questions about the cost of country houses and the means to finance building activity. What was the range within most landowners operated? Did costs escalate as incomes rose? How did builders provide for these expenditures? What were their sources of income and did building overstretch their resources and lead them into debt? Is it possible to provide an estimate of total investment in country houses from building accounts, insurance records and taxation data? To what extent did the creation of private paradises contribute to the wider economy?
PLATE
2. The first Duke of Westminster by Sir John Millais.
2
The Builders of the English Country House 'But what do you think of young Sir James Lowther, who, not of age, becomes master of one or two and forty thousand pounds a year. England will become a Heptarchy, the property of six or seven people! The Duke of Bedford is fallen to be not above the fourth rich man in the island.' Horace Walpole to George Montagu, 20 April 1756.1
The first Duke of Westminster (1825-1899) was the beau ideal of a Victorian nobleman (Plate 2). Descended from a companion of William the Conqueror, he fathered a large family of fifteen children from two marriages. A man of great good works, he was at home equally on the racecourse (he won the Derby five times but never bet), the grouse moor or at a missionary meeting. His income more than matched his activities. In the 1870s his country estates, principally in Cheshire, and not large by ducal standards, produced a gross annual rental of £39,000, but his metropolitan properties, 'the most valuable London estate held by any of Her Majesty's subjects', yielded in excess of £250,000 a year by his death. In the 1870s he spent a truly colossal £600,000 on rebuilding the Grosvenors' Cheshire seat, Eaton Hall, to the designs of Alfred Waterhouse (Plate 3).2 In contrast, about a century earlier, a first-generation Norfolk squire, Edmund Rolfe of Heacham (1738-1817) (Plate 4), worried when making his will whether he had sufficient resources to leave his widow an income of £1200 a year and his only son a clear one of £3000 - fI hope in God sufficient for all your wants'. In 1814 these were not marginal incomes for the landed gentry. But they had been hard garnered by the Rolfes. In the course of the eighteenth century they had put together an estate bordering the Wash of over 2000 acres and had greatly extended the family home in the late 1770s at a cost of £4128 (Plate 5). It was an enterprise which thoroughly stretched Edmund Rolfe's resources in the 1780s.3 The Grosvenors and the Rolfes fix the polarities between English country house builders. The Duke of Westminster remains the country's richest landowner;
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PLATE 3. Eaton Hall, Cheshire (Alfred Waterhouse, 1870-82). The entrance front.
Waterhouse's vast pile has been demolished and twice rebuilt. The Heacham estate was sold by the Rolfes in the 1900s, the house pulled down forty years later. The fate of these two families underlines the diversity amongst the landowning class in terms of their wealth as much as of their origins. The relative difference between the income of the Westminsters and the Rolfes by the late nineteenth century was far greater than that between the duke's most prosperous tenant farmer and his most indigent agricultural labourer. And this, of course, in large measure explains the remarkable variety of country houses which Vita Sackville-West commented upon during the Second World War. But it was also a phenomenon not peculiar to the late Victorian period. Two centuries earlier, the famous calculations of England's wealth and social structure in 1688 made by the herald and statistician Gregory King established essentially the same point about the heterogeneity of the landowning class. He identified a roughly tripartite division: 160 peers (with average incomes of £2800) and 26 bishops (£1300); 800 baronets (£800), 600 knights (£650) and 3000 esquires (£450); and lastly 12,000 gentlemen (£280).4
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Twentieth-century economic historians have tended to dispute the fine print of King s figures. Since there was much variation between incomes within each of his ranks, some maintain it makes more sense to regroup the landowning class into two divisions, greater and lesser, cutting across distinctions of title.* Most accept that his estimate of the number of gentlemen is especially problematic, since contemporaries found it impossible to agree about the size, wealth or status of the group.* But the incomes and ranking of his other 4586 landowners, ranging from great duke to parish squire, and roughly equating with a population of
PLATE 4.
Edmund Rolfe by Pompeo Battoni (Rome, 1762).
14
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PLATE 5. Heacham Hall, Norfolk (demolished). A photograph c. 1890 showing the large additions of the late 1770s.
around 5000 country houses, are more plausible, except in that the incomes of the peerage are much understated (all the evidence suggesting wide variations and an average of twice King's figure) and in that there were a number landowners without peerages whose wealth at least equalled that of the average member of the House of Lords.7 The beauty of isolating the English peerage, to review its size and wealth as background to financing its building proclivities, is that at least there is nearprecision about its numbers. King was accurate enough with his estimate of 160 in 1688. A century later (the first two Georges especially balking at its extension), there were still only 220 in 1780. Thereafter numbers rose quite sharply, to 267 in 1800 and 400 in the 1860s. By the end of the nineteenth century the House of Lords would have required, had attendance been regular, double the seating of a century earlier.8 Creations were more prolific than these figures suggest, for peerages (as even the most superficial perusal of the thirteen volumes of the Complete Peerage reveals) frequently became extinct, especially between 1670
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1770, years of demographic crisis that spared neither those of high birth nor full stomach.9 Taking into account that the population of England and Wales increased six times between 1700 and 1900, creations proportionately were not excessive. The English peerage, unlike its continental counterparts, remained small, exclusive and powerful until the late Victorian period. What set this tiny group apart? The English peerage had few legal privileges beyond summons (not automatic for Scottish and Irish peers) to the House of Lords. It was not heavily taxed, but this was true of all landowners after 1720, when the exactions of the Land Tax eased, as the government resorted increasingly to loans serviced by revenues raised principally from indirect custom and excise duties spread across the whole population. The small size of the peerage itself guaranteed exclusiveness. There were only 1003 persons who held peerages across the course of the eighteenth century - or as it was put in the 1980s - about the roll of an average comprehensive school, or the crowd at a fourth division football match at Darlington on a wet Saturday afternoon in February. Moreover, recruitment was self-perpetuating, since new members were drawn almost entirely from within the peerage class itself. A few generals, admirals and very successful lawyers were ennobled, but their social connections were usually impeccable. Otherwise, a regular route of advance to the English peerage was laid down: ownership of a large country estate sufficient to sustain a peer's dignity; a prestigious seat in Parliament; a baronetcy; an Irish peerage; and, finally, an English one. But it was often slow progress, requiring frequent application to the King and his ministers. They pondered hard (often longer about peerage claims than over much more pressing issues), their deliberations creating enormous interest amongst the chattering political elite. The peerage also retained political power, although the influence of the Lords vis-a-vis the Commons in the nation's affairs gently waned from the early eighteenth century. But its hold on the Commons, both through the return of Members of Parliament by direct constituency control and more indirectly through family members occupying large numbers of seats, was firm. At its height in the eighteenth century, this embrace was maintained until the reforms of 1884-85. It was, however, in their grip on the country's executive that the peerage's power is most readily illustrated. The 1743 Pelham cabinet of sixteen members included six dukes and the Archbishop of Canterbury. Only as late as 1859, when Britain's industrial leadership was already at its height, was the balance of the cabinet at last tilted in favour of non-peerage members. The English peerage remained significant in executive terms to 1906, and as an influential second chamber to 1911.10
16
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The peerage also, of course, had enormous influence at county level. Since its numbers were tiny, those regularly residing in any county could usually be counted on one hand. Demonstrating this pattern as late as 1865, the map illustrating Sandford and Townshend's Great Governing Families included 178 p and only thirty-four other large owners in thirty-nine English counties.11 In Norfolk, for example, England's foremost agricultural county, never more than half a dozen peers at any one time ruled the roost, although several more held secondary estates there.12 They provided automatic social leadership in th counties, headed up rival political factions, topped every charitable list. Invariably they filled the office of Lord Lieutenant and, since Lords Lieutenant nominated all justices of the peace, the de facto rulers of the countryside in our period, the appointment remained an important one. More generally, enormous deference was paid to peers. Few were as imperious as the proud seventh Duke of Somerset, who insisted that his children remain standing in his presence, but many of the grandest seldom relaxed their dignity, even in the countryside.13 The first Marquess of Abercorn went shooting kitted out with his Garter sash and star.14 When Earl and Countess Gower visited Alnwick in 1832, they found the castle Very imposing ... crowds of footmen await one at the door and lead one to the Duke and Duchess', but they were amused and a little disappointed when they were driven after breakfast around the park in an open carriage, 'not in the glass coach and six which we have been told was likely'. Even so, they were attended by 'a master of the horse, and outriders'.15 Clearly, the Northumberlands were not going to be outdone by the heir to the Sutherlands. In the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, when they arrived at their country seats from London, members of the peerage received the local gentry and members from the neighbouring corporation, exactly like a minor German prince, to endorse their political and social leadership in the locality. The Irwins of Temple Newsam, placed in considerable financial difficulties in the 1720s and 1730s by the death in quick succession of the third, fourth and fifth Viscounts and the major remodelling of their great old house outside Leeds, borrowed heavily from William Milner (Plate 6). He was the town's wealthiest merchant, its mayor in 1697, and a recent but considerable landowner in his own right, whose son had been created a baronet on his marriage to the Archbishop of York's daughter in 1717. Milner, however, was always careful to wait formally and deferentially upon the Irwins as soon as they returned from town before a more regular exchange of dinners could begin. When the newly created Earl Fitzwalter went down to his Essex
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YJ
estate in the summer of 1730 he 'spent £10 45. at the Saracen's [Chelmsford] upon my neighbours who came to see me, being the minister and principal inhabitants of the town to the number of 130 and 140 on horseback'.16 When he charted the new world of social emulation, leisure and consumption
PLATE 6. The seventh Viscount Irwin and wife, by Philip Merrier c. 1743. He is holding a design for the saloon of Temple Newsam, remodelled 1738-45 and shown in the background.
18
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in Georgian England, Sir John Plumb concluded that 'money was fundamental to happiness'.17 If his sybaritic generalisation has meaning, the peerage was in state of almost continual bliss in the century and a half after 1720. It has been estimated that the average income of the peerage in 1690 was £5000 to £6000; and a century later £10,000.18 By the 1870s it had at least doubled again. Except during the French wars (1793-1815), these gains were not seriously eroded by inflation; mostly they were real. But averages conceal as much as they reveal. Disparities between peerage incomes were always marked, happiness from Sir John's comment always sharply graded. Struggling to keep pace even with his untitled landowning neighbours, the net income of the second Duke of Manchester in the 1740s was no more than £3000.19 Already some in his rank boasted means at least ten times as large. By the 1790s, 'the really great grand seigneurs, like the Dukes of Bedford, Bridgewater, Devonshire and the Egremonts, Shelburnes and Rockinghams [Fitzwilliams], had incomes approaching forty or even fifty thousand pounds, and were richer than many of the small independent rulers of the Continent'.20 Certainly, the houses they built, Petworth, Chatsworth, Wentworth Woodhouse, Woburn, were palaces. By the time Bateman came to juggle with the plethora of statistics which the 'New Domesday' of landownership threw up in 1873 these disparities were ever greater. There were fifteen owners in Great Britain and Ireland (with one exception all peers) with landed incomes in excess of £100,000. The Duke of Buccleuch's income from his 460,000 acres, his mineral quarries and his harbour at Granton was £231,855. The Duke of Bedford's was £141,739 without 'his large London property'. The Duke of Westminster, likewise submitting no return from his estates in Mayfair and Belgravia which made him Britain's wealthiest landowner, was not even included in Bateman's super-rich league. In addition, there were fifty-one landed incomes (again unsurprisingly all but six of these of peers) of between £50,000 and £100,000. On the other hand, almost fifty peers, and not invariably of the Scottish and Irish variety, derived incomes of less than £7000 a year from land. That of England's premier marquess, Winchester, was only £4635; that of the premier viscount, Hereford, a mere £2241 from 2100 acres - a marginal entry on both counts. Also Bateman relegated to an appendix a motley list of sixty-six peers and peerages, 'none possessing] the double qualification of 2000 acres worth a minimum of £2000 per annum'.21 Already by the 1870s there were peers - especially thos whose titles were recently derived from prominence in the law - who ha insufficient means to buy large landed estates and build and maintain a sizeable
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19
country house. As creations proceeded apace, and wealth could be more conveniently and profitably held in other forms, a titled plutocracy emerged. After the mid nineteenth century, it was often content to enjoy the fruits of ennoblement from a London base and from a home in the country either rented or, after 1880, without the burden of broad acres and a vast house. Nevertheless, Bateman's pages, compiled on the eve of prolonged agrarian depression, reveals a peerage generally at the peak of its prosperity. Nor was it ossified. It responded to change. Certainly it became more cohesive. Newcomers were admitted, and the Scottish and Irish peerages - through intermarriage and long sojourns in London - became thoroughly integrated with their English counterparts. Together, they faced up to a crisis of confidence following the War of American Seccession and the French Revolution by winning a great victory over Napoleon.22 The ebb in their influence after 1832 was very gradual. How had the big increases in peerage incomes come about across two centuries? Evidence is not in short supply - the literature on the landed estate is voluminous. Each of the 4500 sizeable estates, scattered randomly across the very diverse agricultural regions of England, experienced a different evolution; each revealed a different demographic profile of ownership. The most recent survey of landownership, alive with examples, runs close to 800 pages.23 Yet whilst historians disagree about the impact, timing and weighting of various factors, all are of the opinion that the growth of the large estate and the increasing wealth of their owners was abundantly evident after 1660.24 Three principal causes appear to have worked together to produce the right conditions: the use of the strict settlement or entail allowing estates to be passed from one generation to another largely intact (somewhere between a half and two-thirds of land owned by large landowners was settled); the negotiation of advantageous marriage settlements between landed families and sometimes with the richest bourgeoisie; and the increased reliance upon mortgages to fund territorial expansion, family settlements and estate debt generally. Manipulation of these three features was at the core of all dynastic landed ambition. Classically, they led to the evolution of the great ten, twenty, thirty thousand acre estates which were such a marked feature of British life in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Of course there were wider influences, without which these strategies and devices could not have operated. After 1688 the great upheavals of the seventeenth century, which had so thoroughly destabilised the land market and so troubled landowners, subsided. At home political stability and peace, with few
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major disturbances, returned. Moreover, the post-Revolution political settlement, enshrining the power of property, was immensely favourable to agricultural and industrial development and to colonial expansion alike. Interest rates after the 1690s were low; agricultural prices and incomes rose appreciably after 1750. When population growth began to accelerate after the 1750s, grain prices increased from the low levels which had generally subsisted since the 1660s. The French wars (1793-1815) further fuelled inflationary trends. Wheat prices almost doubled between the late 1780s from around forty-eight shillings per quarter to eighty-four shillings in 1800. Towards the end of the wars (1809-12) they had reached an average 122 shillings, levels not recorded again until the early 1970s. Rents reflected these increases and also the benefits of enclosure to landlords. During the wars they advanced by some 90 per cent on average, although on some estates by as much as 175 per cent. When peace came cereal prices eased considerably; but, although there were pressures on rents and the length of leases in the worst years of the post-1815 depression, rentals in the 1820s remained around twice their pre-1790 levels. Landowners shared fully in the general prosperity of agriculture after the 1750s. The recording of negotiations and transactions surrounding settlements and borrowing, purchases, rentals, leases and sales of land filled the muniment rooms and estate offices of every country house. But there were landowners, often the largest, whose incomes were made up from other sources besides land. Some, with spectacular examples such as the first Duke of Chandos, Sir Robert Walpole and the Fox family, did well from political place and office, especially during the many periods when Britain was at war. Cannons and Houghton were monuments to government place. But many a peerage family's finances were reinforced, if less spectacularly, from the profits of office, as the Extraordinary Red Book (181 and John Wade's Black Book: or Corruption Unmasked (1819) disclosed. They rev scores of sinecures, realising thousands of pounds annually for those influential members of the peerage who struggled most successfully to acquire them. When they were gradually abolished after 1832 holders were generously compensated. The Dukes of Grafton received no less than £420,761 between 1809 and 1857 when their sinecure places and perpetual pensions, largely conferred on the first Duke by his father, Charles II, were redeemed. These were sums which allowed them to keep two large houses open and out of debt even when landed incomes dipped sharply after 1880. More often the most notable landed fortunes were increasingly supplemented by urban rentals and mineral rights and way-leaves. Certainly, the
THE
BUILDERS
OF THE
PLATE 7. Sir John Ramsden's landed income disclosed in John Bateman's Great T
1
r /->
1. n -i. •
f nr,
A \
Tof £15,472- was just a foretaste of a long and profitable association with the Rothschild family who, by 1873, had paid Myers some £350,000 for building work.87 From the 1850s it was increasingly common for small as well as large country house works to be placed with London contractors. Whereas Haveringland Hall (Norfolk) had been built in the 1840s in the traditional way by a directly recruited labour force supervised by a clerk of the works, when the house was extended in 1851 by London contractors, Messrs Thomas and William Piper, they worked to an agreed price and completion date. George Trollope and Sons, also London based, were employed in the same decade for alterations to the domestic offices, repairs and redecoration. When relatively modest work was needed in 1890 on the heating and lighting systems in the billiard-room, fixed-price bids were sought from no fewer than four different contractors.88 Yet another wellknown London firm of country house contractors, Holland and Hannen, finished the interior of T. H. Wyatt's Orchardleigh (Somerset) in 1859 for William Duckworth.89 They secured the contract by competitive tender to rebuild the north-west front of Sir Charles Isham's Lamport Hall (Northamptonshire) under William Burn in 1861-62, extended Deene Park (Northamptonshire) for Lord Cardigan in 1865, again to T. H. Wyatt's designs, and built Shabden (Surrey) to those of E. M. Barry in 1871-73.90
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Although there appears to have been an increased tendency by top-flight architects to employ London contractors, provincial architects and builders also conformed to the new procedures. They are revealed in the contract to rebuild Backford Hall (Cheshire) in the late 1840s.91 Captain Edward Holt Glegg's neoElizabethan house was designed by John Cunningham; John and William Walter contracted to erect it in just under two years for £10,700, payable in seven instalments, the first six at defined stages of construction, and the last one month after completion. All changes had to be agreed with the architect and the client was protected against unreasonable claims for day-work payments because they would not be entertained unless certified by the clerk of the works in the week in which the claimed work was done. The contractor was responsible for repairs for six months after completion and each party undertook to pay £1000 for non-performance of the contract. The architect prepared drawings and working plans, and specified the work to be done. The schedule of quantities of materials was drawn up by John Faram, a Liverpool civil engineer and surveyor, for a commission of 1% per cent, half paid by the contractor. The proposals, when approved by the client, were passed to a clerk of the works for execution by the contractor. This well-defined arrangement demonstrates that the division of responsibilities between client and contractor must be known if a reported 'building cost' is to be interpreted correctly. In this case Glegg undertook to level and excavate the site. He also supplied stone and paid for the local carriage of materials from the railway station, canal, and sand and gravel pits. On the other hand, the contractor provided labour and the payment of wages and lodgings, workmanship, materials delivered to the local station or canal wharf, sheds and coverings. He was liable for damage or loss of materials. He was also responsible for scaffolding, ladders, ropes, tools, tackle, implements and utensils, and for providing an office for the clerk of the works. The specification of work covered each trade separately. Some old materials were reused, and particular fittings specified: a hot-air apparatus from Walkers of Manchester was installed, designed to achieve a comfortable 65 °F in the heated rooms when the outside temperature was a freezing 22 °. Captain Glegg no doubt recognised the advantages of dealing with a single contractor and knew in advance how much he had to pay. His experience was not universal. It might be expected that new recruits to the ranks of the landed gentry and aristocracy from industrial or commercial backgrounds would be more
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likely to approach building in a businesslike way. However, building aspirations and ample resources were a heady mixture. Business acumen was no guarantee that building costs would be kept within bounds, nor that the outcome would satisfy the client. Among nineteenth-century clients, the degree of architectural education or awareness that was a sine qua non for the eighteenth-century gentleman could also no longer be assumed. We have seen how John Walter's relationship with his architect foundered on the rocks of contractual imprecision and design uncertainty. In 1856 William Duckworth (1795-1876), beneficiary of a Lancashire fortune, flushed with the success of securing the Orchardleigh (Somerset) estate for £96,000, obtained a design for a new house from T. H. Wyatt (1807-1880).92 Tenders for the carcase were obtained from five local builders. Bidding was close, the contract going to a Bradford-on-Avon builder with a bid of £9714, with wrought iron girders specified as having to be obtained from London for an additional £1479. Significantly, the more complex task of finishing the interior was not put out to tender, but given to the ubiquitous London contractors Holland and Hannen. Wyatt estimated that the cost would be threefifths of the carcase cost, that is £6681. Thus the expected total for the house was £17,824. In the event, although the contractor kept to his price for the shell of the house, by 1864 extras had taken Duckworth's bill to £34,592, almost exactly twice Wyatt's original costings.93 At least Duckworth had chosen an experienced architect. Other clients ventured into the unknown. Samuel Jones Loyd (1796-1883), elevated to the peerage as Lord Overstone in 1850, was born into a banking family and possessed one of the largest fortunes of his day. From the 1830s he began to look forward to his retirement, reducing his dependence upon income derived from finance by buying large landed estates.94 In the 1870s he enjoyed a rental income of over £58,000 per annum from nearly 31,000 acres, of which half were in Northamptonshire.95 There he was persuaded by his wife to build a new house, Overstone Hall, in 1861-62 (Plate 65). For reasons best known to himself, he chose an obscure young architect, W. M. Teulon, brother of the better-known Samuel. Loyd's enormously successful background in business was no guarantee that his country house building project would proceed smoothly. It was not the cost of the house that concerned him but its design and execution. He bemoaned: The New House I regret to say, is the cause of unmitigated disappointment and vexation. It is an utter failure - We have fallen into the hands of an architect in whom incapacity is his smallest fault. The House tho' very large and full of pretension - has
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65. Overstone Hall, Northamptonshire (W. M. Teulon, 1861-62), from The Builder, 1862.
neither taste, comfort nor convenience. I am utterly ashamed of it ... the principal rooms are literally uninhabitable - I shall never fit them up ... I grieve to think that I shall hand such an abortion to my successors.96 There were of course reliable architects and contractors in plenty. Successful commissions were achieved through the patronage of young talent. Country houses were, however, complex creations. Predicting the outcome of a building programme was not always possible. Certainly, the new contracting procedures did not remove all uncertainty. Soane's statement of the duties of an architect had touched on a crucial issue for the client. How would his project be executed and what control would he have over expenditure?
5
A Pleasure Not to be Envied 'The immediate and most obvious advantages of building are, employing many ingenious artificers, many industrious workmen and labourers of various kinds; converting materials of little value into the most stately productions of human skill; beautifying the face of countries; multiplying the conveniences and comforts of life.' Sir William Chambers, writing in 1791.1 'How very little, since things were made, Things have altered in the building trade/ Rudyard Kipling, 'A Truthful Song'.2
However beguiling the prospect of creating a new house, or altering an existing one, the building of a country house was always a complex task in terms of planning, financing and management. The undertaking in reality was a formidable one. Often builders were rueful about the experience. '[There are] those who say, that a wise man never ought to put his finger into mortar', wrote Sir Balthazar Gerbier in 1662.3 Daniel Finch, second Earl of Nottingham, the builder of Burley-on-the-Hill, was hardly more encouraging in 1701 when he advised Lord Normanby: 'Building ... is a pleasure your lordship will not envy me once you have tried it.' 4 Although more than a century later Sir Thomas Cullum, of Hardwick House in Suffolk, wisely took himself off to Rome while his house was being remodelled, he could not escape the warning to him conveyed by his banker, in the words of Miss Westrup (was she Sir Thomas's housekeeper?) amidst the turmoil at Hardwick: 'Pray sir, don't think of building, you can't tell the misery of it.' 5 The prudent country house builder was therefore meticulous in the development of his plans. Whether it was the country squire desiring a comfortable but modish home for his family, the territorial magnate anxious to make a grand architectural statement about his political and social position, or the newcomer
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keen to display his wealth, talking to friends, consulting experts, looking at buildings, reading books, and considering the financial implications of the venture, was the route to perfection. Yet however carefully plans were laid, at the point of departure upon usually the biggest enterprise of his life, the country house builder ventured into potentially uncharted territory. As Henry Wilson of Stowlangtoft Hall in Suffolk wrote in the 1860s to Sir Thomas Fremantle, after completing his own house and anticipating Sir Thomas's undertaking: 'I rejoice at your determination, though I should be still better pleased if, like myself, you were stepping out of the mire instead of stepping into it.'6 Plans themselves were not easy to formulate and, of course, they took years to execute. But it was the cost and management of projects which caused the most prolonged headaches for builders over the years. In the absence of reliable cost-estimating procedures, the drain on a builder's purse was difficult to predict.7 They also found themselves engaging large, diverse workforces which lacked the customary discipline of their own estate employees. Large quantities of materials had to be secured from a wide range of sources and made available on site when needed. Assistance and support from someone well-versed in the reading of sets of architects' plans and detailed drawings, building techniques, man-management and the keeping of accounts was therefore essential. A key figure in building the country house, ideally combining all these talents, was the clerk of the works. There were established precedents for the organisation of building projects, both large and small. In the king's service, the clerk of the works emerged as a specialist administrator during the course of Edward Ill's great building programme of the mid fourteenth century.8 The clerks were distinguishable from the master craftsmen responsible for the technical direction of the work. They were not specifically trained for their role, but were increasingly drawn from the growing body of king's clerks, who moved from one royal duty to another. For men such as William of Wykeham, the appointment proved to be a stepping-stone for further advancement. Geoffrey Chaucer was another notable clerk of the works.9 The clerk's essential duty was to account for his expenditure, although it was a difficult process without the benefit of a regular system of estimates on the one hand and some predetermined allocation of money on the other. The clerks had other responsibilities. They organised the craftsmen, labourers, materials and transport necessary for the undertaking. They paid the workforce and maintained its discipline; they ensured the security of the building materials and oversaw the
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disposal of any surpluses. The clerk's role developed to embrace inspection of the works as well as accountancy, the title 'surveyor' being coupled with that of clerk in the patents of employment from 1421 onwards. In the sixteenth century it was to become the sole designation. Early in that century came the appointment of men who spent their whole career in the service of the king's works and, with the engagement of the master carpenter James Nedeham in 1532, a significant shift to the employment of technically qualified men.10 The scale of royal building led to increased differentiation of roles. Lay surveyors, not trained in writing and book-keeping, needed a staff of professional clerks. A purveyor acquired materials; a tallyman checked their arrival and looked after their security; another clerk oversaw the workmen and kept the books. When specialist knowledge was needed, craftsmen were deputed to inspect materials and fix rates for contracts. Progress clerks watched the pace of building so that targets were met. Country house builders were aware of the importance of these tasks undertaken by the royal clerks-surveyors, but finding one man who could perform them all effectively was difficult. Gentlemen builders of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, for whom architecture was a polite accomplishment rather than a professional qualification, might have the knowledge, interest and time to cover much of the ground themselves. Sir Roger Pratt (1620-1685), The Ingenious Gentleman Architect', recognised the danger of overspending, and argued that it chiefly proceeded from a lack of providence or the ignorance of the builder. He recommended that: 'If estate owners have neither skill, time or patience to superintend building, better get an experienced honest surveyor.'11 His near contemporary, Roger North (1653-1734), a builder himself and an intelligent and astringent commentator on current architectural practice, recommended that project supervision should not be delegated: 'if he leaves the affair to his surveyor ... he shall be miserably disappointed in charge as well as convenience'. North therefore envisaged that gentlemen should keep close personal control of their building projects.12 Epitomising this approach, Thomas Worsley was his own architect and builder in the construction of Hovingham Hall from 1751 to 1778.13 Similarly, John Buxton, the Norfolk amateur architect, remodelled his 1560s house, Channonz Hall, and designed and built two other villas for himself, Earsham Hall and Shadwell Lodge. Of the latter he wrote in 1727: The building goes forward very well, and I thank God I've yet strength enough to be with the workmen six or seven hours in the day and find much occation to be there
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not knowing how to depend upon the surveyor, who is often absent and as often when there liable to blunder/14 Few, however, are likely to have exceeded the total commitment of William Wrightson in the 1740s, an old man who daily directed the building of Cusworth Hall, on a bleak hillside overlooking Doncaster, from a bo'sun's chair fixed to the scaffolding.15 There were many owners who had neither the time nor inclination to involve themselves on the scale of Worsley, Buxton and Wrightson. Some were nonresident for years on end, some deeply immersed in government business. Also, as the roads improved, the gentry went up to London and Bath more frequently. Therefore, in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, when an increasing number of houses were either being rebuilt or remodelled, it was common for estate stewards to act as clerks of the works.16 Their particular assets were local knowledge of the estate and the surrounding region. They were also deemed trustworthy, as members of the master's 'family' and administrators of estate income. Given a competent steward, a master's absence was certainly no bar to his detailed involvement in building construction and maintenance. The letters that frequently passed between Lord Fitzwilliam and Francis Guybon, his steward at Milton in Northamptonshire, show that, although Fitzwilliam did not once set foot in Milton during the twelve years covered by the correspondence, the able Guybon kept his master well informed about all aspects of estate activity, and Fitzwilliam could effectively manage Milton affairs from the capital.17 Guybon engaged, supervised and paid building craftsmen, although the responsibility for reports on Milton House and discussions with the architect William Talman, who inspected Milton in 1688, were passed to Fitzwilliam's chaplain, the Revd Jeremiah Pendleton. In the 1720s to 1740s, Daniel Eaton, steward at Deene in Northamptonshire for the third and fourth Earls of Cardigan, was well-versed in surveying, building technology and brickmaking.18 He prepared estimates of cost for building work, and was additionally enrolled in the Court of Common Pleas as an attorney. Such skills would have been of particular value in negotiations with farm and building labourers and craftsmen, for it was Lord Cardigan's practice to employ few regular full-time men, instead contracting for nearly all work 'by the great', a fixed price being agreed with individuals or groups of men. William Blathwayt had considerably less confidence in his estate staff when he rebuilt Dyrham in Gloucestershire from 1692 to 1703. Although he was deeply involved in the planning and execution of the project, his duties as Secretary at
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War to William III, and his attendance upon the King during his summer campaigns in Flanders from 1692 to 1701, meant that building operations were conducted by correspondence. Building was supervised by local men acting as clerks of the works, with his agent, Charles Watkins, supplementing the clerks' reports with his own statements of progress. Blathwayt's clerks of the works managed the workforce and oversaw the acquisition and movement of materials, but they seem to have lacked technical knowledge of building. His acknowledged administrative skills in fact proved to be no guarantee that the notoriously difficult task of supervising building workers would be accomplished without problems. Unwilling to delegate authority, he forced his diffident and easily confused staff to refer the smallest details for his decision.19 It is not surprising that the additional responsibilities associated with a major building project were sometimes accepted with reluctance.20 Indeed, it is difficult to see how a full-time steward could also perform the onerous duties of a clerk of the works. It might be possible where the relatively small scale of the project, or the desired rate of progress, meant that the work could be handled by the estate workforce or a small number of trusted master-craftsmen. When clerks of the works were employed, they might come from a number of different backgrounds, with many of the non-professionals doing the job only once. They might be clerics, estate tenants, stewards or craftsmen, independent craftsmen, or pupil architects. In exceptional cases, like that of Thomas Ripley, the role shaded into that of executant architect (Plate 66). A London-based master carpenter and, most importantly, a protege of Sir Robert Walpole, Ripley held a string of official positions in the King's Works from 1716. He was already architect of the London Custom House (1718), and probably that at Liverpool, before he began supervising the construction of Houghton Hall in Norfolk for Sir Robert in 1721. Not only was he PLATE 66 T h o m a s mpley> b y J o s e p h responsible for the superb quality of the Highmore, 1746.
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execution of Colen Campbell's designs during the house's construction between 1721 and 1735, he also seems to have adapted them, especially those of the stables; to the extent that Isaac Ware, admittedly an apprentice of Ripley's, claimed in 1735 that Ripley was the architect of Houghton. He was certainly responsible for nearby Wolterton and for alterations at Raynham in the 1720s.21 Gaining experience of architectural design and construction through the position of clerk of the works, thereby attracting a patron's eye, was important to other able young men from craft backgrounds: William Etty at Castle Howard, James Paine at Nostell Priory, John Carr at Kirby Hall, William Thornton at Beningborough Hall and Samuel Wyatt at Kedleston Hall, for example.22 On the other hand, when Edmund Rolfe greatly extended Heacham Hall in Norfolk in the 1770s, probably never employing more than two dozen men on site at any one time, the work was supervised by Charles Hay, a small farmer who seems to have managed the estate.23 It was unlikely, however, that anyone other than a full-time clerk of the works, thoroughly trained in building practices, could have effectively supervised big projects involving a sizeable workforce of directly-recruited men, which, as we shall see later, constantly altered in composition not only because tasks changed as a project proceeded but also because of the transitory nature of building workers. At Henham Hall, entirely rebuilt in the 1790s for Sir John Rous, the clerk of the works was the estate carpenter, Rufus Marsden.24 At peak periods in the construction of the house he was supervising eighty men. Unusually, the weekly statements or pay-bills he prepared have almost all survived, covering the period of building from March 1792 to early 1800. They take a form familiar for most big building projects throughout the period, listing the names of workers, the number of days they were employed, and their wage-rates, earnings and expenses (Plate 67). The men are usually grouped by trade, although in the Henham case this is rarely stated explicitly. It is the recording of other payments which throws further light on the key organisational role of the clerk of the works beyond the supervision of labour. Marsden travelled to Yarmouth where he bought deals, battens, scaffold poles and mahogany veneers. He arranged the transport of the goods to the building site, and the movement of considerable quantities of timber from the estate's woods. He paid the contractors, leisurely in the mode of the eighteenth century, with sums advanced by Rous or his agent. In all, Marsden accounted for the payment of some £17,200 over seven years, more than 80 per cent of the money spent building the house passing through his hands.
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PLATE 67. Henham Hall, Suffolk, clerk of the works's account for January 1795.
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PLATE 68. Eshton Hall, Yorkshire (George Webster, 1825-27 and 1830s).
In the absence of a suitable candidate from his estate or, increasingly, a recommendation from an architect, the prospective builder of a country house might have recourse to his friends, or a business acquaintance. Mathew Wilson of Eshton (Plate 68) in Yorkshire recorded in his day book in 1824 that his supplier of timber, c J o n n Settle of Skipton, recommended me to one Mawson, a joiner and house carpenter. Agreed with him for 355. per week until my house finished if he conducts himself well, very strongly recommended.' In the margin of the book Wilson scribbled T o be a foreman'.25 For clients with no architectural or building knowledge, however, and who had no suitable estate servant to call upon, it was not enough simply to recruit a clerk of the works. It was necessary to define his responsibilities and determine to whom he reported. Was he the client's agent or, if an architect was involved, was he his man? If this was unclear, the position of the clerk of the works as 'pig in the middle' could be very uncomfortable and the consequences serious. Building was an activity, inherently difficult to manage, which often led to friction
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between the parties involved. It does not necessarily follow that enterprises were always beset by problems, despite the frequency of cries of anguish from disgruntled clients. The architect Henry Holland (1745-1806) was complimented in 1801 by Samuel Whitbread, for whom he built Southill, for the Very handsome manner in which you have treated me throughout the whole business', adding that never had he transacted any that had given him such pleasure and satisfaction.26 Conflict, especially when litigation was envisaged and where papers survive, is inevitably better documented than amity. Nevertheless, apart from the recital of difficulties, the study of problem projects reveals much about the changing expectations of clients, and business patterns across our period. When Humphry Repton was engaged by George Freke Evans to make alterations to Laxton Hall (Northamptonshire) in the 1800s, problems soon arose concerning the clerk of the works.27 Their crux was supervision. Repton provided the first clerk, John Collett, whom Freke Evans, already wary of Repton's delays and his expense claims, believed to be incompetent from the start. Repton, with no training yet perhaps the wordiest member of the architectural profession, shrugged off the matter, blaming jealousies and ignorance among the tradesmen. Eighteen months later, Freke Evans himself seems to have attempted to find a replacement through the master carpenter on the site. As the latter explained, it was not easy, for he reckoned that out of forty workmen it was rare to find more than one who was fitted to act as clerk of the works. A man might be a tip-top carpenter but useless at keeping accounts and directing a large, assorted workforce. At this point Repton employed the fifty-seven year old, and presumably vastly experienced, Uriah Woolcot. He proved to be no more acceptable. Repton, increasingly exasperated by his exacting client, sought to distance himself from the problem. His view was that Evans clearly knew what was going on from day to day, whereas he, not receiving copies of Woolcot's report to Evans, had no intelligence about detail and progress until the clerk of the works was in serious trouble. Somewhat nonchalantly, Repton claimed that (as far as he was concerned) no news was good news. He expected that if they were not covered by the architect's plans, points of detail could be settled on site between the clerk and the client. This clearly left the latter in a vulnerable position. Generally, it was a matter of judgement how much detailed support the clerk needed from the architect. However, if the former was not up to the job - and was reporting to a client with little experience of building - trouble ensued if he was not well supervised. At Sheringham (Norfolk), built in the 1810s again to
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Repton's designs (Plate 69), the first clerk of the works, the local workhouse master, a man diligent to a fault according to the enthusiastic client, Abbot Upcher, allowed the premature removal of wooden arches supporting the cellar roof after incessant rain.28 To everyone's surprise and dismay it caved in. Who was to blame? The unfortunate clerk of works, the workmen, Upcher himself or the ever-voluble Repton? Or was it the impossibility of closely supervising an inexperienced clerk of the works one hundred and thirty miles away from Repton's base at Hare Street near Romford? Also in the early nineteenth century, when the architectural profession faced criticism of its inability to control costs, and agonised about its relationship with general building contractors, two well-documented examples from the career of Lewis Wyatt are especially revealing on the subject of building supervision and the relationship between client, architect and clerk of the works.29 By the 1820s he was an architect of considerable experience both public (he held positions in
69. Sheringham Hall, Norfolk (Humphry and John Adey Repton, 1813-17, completed 1838-40) plan and elevation.
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PLATE 70. Sherborne Hall, Gloucestershire (Lewis Wyatt, 1829-34).
the Office of Works for over thirty years) and private (he inherited the flourishing Cheshire practice of his uncle Samuel in 1807).30 Lord Sherborne commissioned him to rebuild his eponymous Gloucestershire house (Plate 70), insisting it should preserve something of the spirit of its predecessor.31 Before building began in 1829 Wyatt had discussed the management of the project with his client. A curiously fragmented structure was devised. John Roberts, already employed at Sherborne, would agree contracts for the supply of materials and take charge of masons, bricklayers, slaters and quarrymen, whilst George Beedham, who had worked under Wyatt's direction at Stoke Hall (Nottinghamshire), would supervise the carpenters and joiners. In addition, a general accountant-supervisor was 'to conduct the whole and prevent jealousies'. A faint hope. Wyatt's opinion of Roberts was soon qualified, although he admitted that the burden of supervising a great number of men seven days a week was a heavy one. When Lord Sherborne's agent, George Newmarch, timidly complained 'that matters do not quite go on satisfactorily', Wyatt recognised the folly of divided responsibility which had fuelled both jealousies and costs. When Beedham left in some haste on the discovery of dry rot in the spring of 1835, Lord Sherborne's
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patience snapped. Having spent upwards of £40,000, he wrote to Newmarch: 'Considering that I was dealing with a gentleman I had no written agreement with Mr Wyatt, therefore I can only complain generally that he never paid the attention to the works which according to our understanding he was bound to do . . . I might as well have saved all the percentage [Wyatt's 5 per cent commission] for a common builder could not have done worse.' Wishing to avoid litigation, both parties sought advice and arbitration between 1835 and 1837. Lord Sherborne pressed for Wyatt to be made liable for the cost of putting the house in order, and an award for negligence of £996 was made against him.32 In the end, Anthony Salvin was brought in to complete the interior between 1841 and 1842.33 In 1826 Wyatt was invited by Gibbs Antrobus to submit plans to extend Eaton-by-Congleton Hall in Cheshire.34 Antrobus had very recently inherited the house from an uncle who had been a partner in Coutts Bank. The client initially contemplated the extension of the existing house but, uneasy about the balance between old and new accommodation, then proposed rebuilding on a new site, whilst stressing that his income was fixed and the estate entailed. Wyatt, almost doubling the cost of the project in prospect, persuaded the Antrobuses to build their house in 'new' Elizabethan style, although Mrs Antrobus 'was glad . . . to find that the style of architecture you gave us was not so much more expensive than the Grecian' (Plate 71). These were early days. In encouraging his clients to accept his plans and remuneration, rather than those of Thomas Lee, his former clerk of the works, Wyatt explained the basis of professional practice around 1830. After thirty years in the business, he knew what was expected of a clerk of the works: The usual [architect's] charge being 5 per cent on the expenditure of the building when executed from the necessary working drawings and under the superintendence of a regular Clerk of the Works whose duty it is to communicate with, and to report his proceedings to the architect. He is also to order and look into the proper materials, to keep a regular weekly building account, and to hire and pay the workmen's wages. The tradesmen's and merchants' bills, after being certified by him are either paid by the Gentleman or his Steward, who is usually appointed to keep a proper cash and building account. The Clerk of the Works being in fact the builder will be a proper person to ... look out the timber, deals, wainscots and laths, to see what oak timber, bricks, lime, sand or any old materials the estate can furnish, to look into and make contracts for proper
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PLATE 71. Eaton-by-Congleton Hall, Cheshire (Lewis Wyatt, 1829-31, demolished), garden front. Watercolour 1827 from a collection of Lewis Wyatt plans for the house.
supplies of stone, slate, lime, lead, or any other building materials, and for the carriage and delivery of the same. He is also employed to look into and hire at the customary wages of the country all workmen viz masons, bricklayers, carpenters, joiners, sawyers, slaters, labourers or any other he can employ with advantage and of them he is to keep a regular account of their time, to pay them all the wages they are hired at and with a proper check or assistant to see them on and off their daily work and to control the time allowed for their meals.35
Wyatt's description of the clerk of the works as 'the builder', under his supervision, is instructive. He went on to explain to Antrobus that he himself would not get tied up with general building contractors. If Antrobus employed, as he proposed, his late uncle's builder, that would be unacceptable to Wyatt, and the clerk of the works would be employed by and report to Antrobus alone. Antrobus might well have been confused which route to choose. In the end, he relied on Wyatt. His final bill for a 'plain and heavy' house was £23,000 - the cost had escalated from a first estimate of £10-12,000 for extensions. Wyatt's fee was £ii5o.36
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As the nineteenth century went on, there is evidence of an increasingly professional approach to the appointment of a clerk of the works and the performance of the role. At Haveringland in Norfolk in the 1840s, Edward Blore designed a new house for Edward Fellowes.37 The clerk of the works was Richard Armstrong. He was neither an estate employee nor a local tradesman; and, although he does not appear in lists of Blore's pupils, he was practising in London as an architect in his own right by the 1850s. Indeed, he reappeared at Haveringland in the 1850s and 1860s to design extensions and garden buildings. He was also responsible for alterations of 1856-60 to Englefield House, Berkshire, the seat of Edward Fellowes's brother, Richard Benyon, besides restoring churches for the family. The layout of Armstrong's weekly reports to Fellowes was essentially the same as those prepared at Henham fifty years before. They show that he visited Bristol and Bath in 1839, at the start of the project, to arrange the supply of Bath stone. He obtained competitive bids from Norwich haulage contractors for the movement of building materials from Great Yarmouth and Norwich to Haveringland. Dissatisfied with the performance of the Haveringland brickmaker, Armstrong dismissed him and supervised production himself. Some estate owners involved themselves in the details of such disputes with building workers. Immersed up to his ears in government business, William Blathwayt never hesitated to settle a squabble with the Dyrham workforce, although his messages from London and the Netherlands lost something of their force by the time their contents were made known to the miscreants on site. For many, however, to be shielded by their clerk of the works from such problems was very welcome. It is clear from his attitude to wages and expenses that clerks of the works like Armstrong could achieve savings of the order Wyatt claimed. The purse-strings at Haveringland were indeed tightly controlled. Neither in his detailed reports nor in Edward Fellowes's own ledgers is there any trace of the expense of the traditional roof-raising ceremony, or the sniff of a barrel of beer, during the four years the accounts run.38 In the teeth of the worst depression of the nineteenth century (1837-42), Armstrong managed to employ men at Haveringland at rates 20 per cent or more below those of similar projects in the same county.39 When Armstrong closed his accounts, Fellowes was evidently so satisfied with his performance that he was given a £50 gratuity, the equivalent of sixteen weeks' salary. It marked a project very differently concluded from James Wyatt's at Henham, costing some 70 per cent over the estimate, or from the litigation surrounding his nephew's work at Sherborne.
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Oddly, the remuneration of good clerks of the works does not seem to have matched their usefulness. It was variable, but often little in advance of the skilled workmen on site.40 Hay at Heacham in the 1770s was paid a guinea a week, whereas the London-based mason who came tofixtwo statuary marble fireplaces was paid 35. a day (with is. a week lodging allowance) and the better-paid joiners and bricklayers 25. to 25. 3d. Marsden at Henham, a local man again, received 35. 6d., no more than the other highest-paid men on site, the bricklayers and joiners James Wyatt had sent from London. During the inflationary period of the French wars, when skilled labour was scarce, Humphry Repton recommended a clerk of the works at Laxton in 1806 at 2 guineas per week, little more than his estimate of 75. per day for top tradesmen, although he may have exaggerated the latter, as he did most things, to push the clerk of the works he proposed.41 By the 1840s the real contribution of clerks of the works was being recognised by thoroughly competent architects like Edward Blore. Armstrong at Haveringland was clearly distinguished from the other workers there. He received 3 guineas a week, or over 105. per working day, when the highest-paid tradesman received only 35. 6d. per day, a rate no higher than that paid at Henham fifty years earlier. Armstrong's total remuneration, as the man on the spot, masterminding the smooth running of the whole project and effecting significant economies, was £778 - not far short of the £894 fee earned by the architect. Richard Armstrong received much more support from Edward Blore, a conscientious attender at Haveringland, than did Rufus Marsden at Henham. The latter was paid far less for a more difficult job. It is doubtful whether James Wyatt, notorious for his neglect, ever visited the site. Lewis Wyatt, although criticised for neglect at Sherborne, was there on ten occasions. The increasing professionalisation of architects, and their more regular site inspections which improvements in transport allowed, made the tasks of the clerk of the works easier and better defined. A good clerk of the works clearly saved considerable sums of money for his client. He ensured that men paid by the day did not spin out the work, that piece-work was not skimped, and that materials were of good quality, reasonably priced and delivered on time. By good management, the clerk of the works also relieved the client, and his steward, of time-consuming and stressful involvement in the resolution of disputes. He was also in a position of considerable trust, with a high proportion of the cost of building a house passing through his hands. In a labour-intensive activity like building, in addition to keeping labour costs down, maintaining the productivity
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of the workforce alone offered considerable potential savings. Completion on time, and the avoidance of subsequent repairs due to the use of poor materials or faulty construction, constituted other obvious advantages for a country house builder who employed a skilled clerk of the works. Given the expenditure on a house of the equivalent of five or more year's rental income, saving 10 per cent of the cost would keep a six months' portion of this sum in the builder's pocket. Around the middle of the nineteenth century, the clerk of the works's traditional role disappears from estate accounts, with the emergence of the general contractor and of building to a fixed price.42 The function of course survived within contractors' organisations, with their clerks 'expected to be fully competent to fulfil the several duties of architect, builder and artizan, to be thorough draughtsmen and accountants and yet be practically acquainted with work'.43 Thomas Cubitt trained men as clerks of the works, his pupils paying a premium of 300 guineas for the privilege. For the country house owner, the focus of the supervisory role performed on his behalf shifted from the customary involvement with labour and the acquisition of materials to the overall supervision of the contractor's performance, under the guidance of the architect.44 The client's interests, once the contract was signed, were less concerned with cost (unless he indulged in the expensive business of changing his mind) and more with the design and quality of the building. The nature of the professional support he required therefore changed. When Stephen Thompson was building Kirby Hall in the late 1740s, he wrote somewhat discouragingly to his friend, Thomas Grimston, who was similarly engaged in the building of Kilnwick Hall: 'I have bricklayers, joiners, carpenters, glaziers, upholsterers, and smiths at work, from all of which the Lord soon deliver me.'45 Thompson could have added labourers, masons, roofers, plumbers, painters, even thatchers if new walls had to be capped to protect them from frost damage. Clients were only too aware of the multifarious activities, the dirt and the disruption associated with building. The prospect of the management and payment of scores of workmen for years on end must sometimes have daunted even the most determined builder (Plate 72).46 Country house workforces were not only diverse in composition but also of course varied considerably in size. Lord Carlisle had nearly 200 men at work at Castle Howard in the summer of 1703 when construction of the central block was in full swing.47 Five hundred men are said to have been drafted by James Wyatt from Windsor Castle to Fonthill Abbey in 1799 to complete the Gothic
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PLATE 72. Building tradesmen photographed in 1856 during the construction of Orchardleigh, Somerset.
extravaganza he was building for William Beckford.48 Massive alterations to Alnwick Castle, costing in all some £320,000 between 1854 and 1865, employed 800 workmen at their peak.49 At Westonbirt (Gloucestershire), a huge Victorian house, there were 250 to 300 men on the site for long periods in the 1860s.50 For the exceptional building activity of the crazy Duke of Portland, above and below ground at Welbeck from 1854 to 1872 - spending £100,000 a year for eighteen years - '1500 workpeople of all classes were constantly employed in carrying out his instructions'.51 At the other end of the scale, every granite stone in the walls of Castle Drogo was seemingly placed by one of two masons who toiled there for twenty years from 1911, although the accounts show that the builder, Lewis Bearne, had 100 men on site continually for the first four years and forty other men worked in the estate's quarry, sand and gravel pits and on the roads.52 These are extreme examples. The construction of eight south Yorkshire houses in the eighteenth century, including the vast Wentworth Woodhouse, generated employment for between thity-five and ninety men.53 Snapshots of the number of men on site conceal important temporal changes in the composition of the
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workforce, however, and are a poor guide to the numbers of men of different occupations employed. Whether a house was built in a new location, on an old site or involved the remodelling of an existing structure, the pattern of employment was much the same. Labourers were most numerous when clearing and levelling the site, digging foundations and drains, and moving materials into position for the start of construction. There was often an old house to pull down and materials to be recovered and cleaned for reuse. Saw-pits had to be dug and, as at Wolterton (Norfolk) in 1727, sheds erected for the sawyers, bricklayers, carpenters and masons, and a forge for the smith.54 Robert Rose of Wolterton and 'his company', as many as a dozen men in summer and as few as four in winter, were clearly a cheap and highly flexible workforce (whatever their propensity for absenteeism and drunkenness), unloading the brick kiln, making preparations for the kitchen - and clearing up everywhere. In 1741-42, although the house was complete, as many as sixty labourers were digging new stew ponds, raising a terrace round them and planting trees, probably more men than had worked on the house at any time.55 Before the nineteenth century, however, demand for building labour in the countryside had always to be matched with the needs of the farming calendar. Robert Rose's gang worked on the farm at Wolterton as well as on the house, hoeing turnips and making the hay and the corn harvests. Building Shadwell Lodge, John Buxton wrote in the summer of 1728: 'No thing is begun about the yards or outhouses. Our labourers are so taken up with the husbandry affairs that I can't yet spare them.'56 There was work on the building site for some labourers throughout a project, to fetch and carry for the craftsmen and keep the place tidy, but the number of bricklayers and masons grew as the walls were raised, with carpenters erecting the structural timber and making forms for the turning of arches. In due course, when tilers and plumbers had covered the carcase of the house, interior work proceeded, with structural carpentry succeeded by the finer joinery of floors, doorcases and windows. Plasterers and glaziers turned up, and lastly painters, upholsterers, and specialists to fit kitchens, stoves, bells and other internal equipment. Blacksmiths were employed at some sites as permanent members of the workforce; at others local men worked on a job by job basis. But at all sites the sharpening and repair of tools, and farrier's work, were essential. The character of the workforce across an entire building project is well illustrated by the example of Haveringland Hall (Norfolk). This substantial Italianate seat
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of the Fellowes family had stood for little more than a century before it was demolished in 1946. In its lifetime it attracted little attention beyond the mere listing of its existence.57 The house is given a posthumous significance, however, by the survival of Richard Armstrong's meticulously prepared building statements, Edward Fellowes's own account books and the architect Edward Blore's drawings. Blore's conservative approach to building - he eschewed the increasingly common practice of building to a fixed price by general contract - meant the use of directly-recruited day labour. It was the last house of any size built in the region before the railway reached Norwich and transformed the movement of men and materials. Therefore it is possible to reconstruct the building operation and quantify aspects of a traditional form of project organisation, managed in a thoroughly professional way. In each of the four years of building, from 1839 to 1842, the workforce peaked successively at eighty-seven, sixty-seven, seventy-one and sixty-eight. Numbers of the various tradesmen reached a maximum at different times during the house's construction (see Table 1). Table 1. Peak numbers of men employed building Haveringland Hall, 1839-42™ Year
Labourers Sawyers
1839
37
1840
26
1841
26
1842
16
2
Carpenters/ Bricklayers Masons Plumbers Painters Plasterers Glaziers Joiners 12
21
5
2
18
12
15
1
1
3
2
26
10
8
1
1
8
1
31
4
5
6
7
12
1
44
17
9*
4
Total of different men within each occupation: 103
6
52
18
* Plumbers, painters and glaziers, some men covering more than one trade.
Two hundred and forty-nine different men were employed, most of them for short periods. Only thirty-two of the men (13.2 per cent) were on site for more than half the building period and 114 men (46.9 per cent) were there for less than 10 per cent of the time. Some tradesmen were of course only needed for a short time, but employment generally was casual; and when men left, after a period of work, most did not come back. The pattern for Henham, fifty years earlier, is even more striking. The workforce peaked at sixty-four in the summer of the fourth year of the eight-year project.
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But no fewer than 407 different day-workers, and some additional piece-workers, were involved. Only eleven men (2.7 per cent) worked for more than half the project's duration and 310 (76.1 per cent) for less than 10 per cent of the time. Thus the casual and unpredictable nature of employment for building workers, typical of the Tudor and Jacobean periods, persisted through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.59 Haveringland and Henham Halls were built when and where labour was plentiful, indeed the former was constructed during the most acute economic depression in the nineteenth century, and was supervised by a clerk of the works intent upon keeping costs down. Where labour was short, the rate of turnover of men is likely to have been lower, but there are few projects for which surviving documents permit an equivalent analysis. East Carlton (Northamptonshire), a smaller house than either Haveringland or Henham, built for Sir John Palmer Bt in the 1770s by the Leicestershire-born architect John Johnson, is one (Plate 73). In the course of just over three years the number of men on site peaked at
PLATE 73. East Carlton Hall, Northamptonshire (John Johnson, 1777-81, enlarged 1823 and rebuilt 1870) by George Clarke, c. 1840.
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thirty-eight, with eighty-seven different men being employed overall, indicating a more stable workforce.60 There was a long-term scarcity of building labour in the sixteenth century, even of masons in stone-producing areas.61 Such problems persisted into our period. Daniel Finch, second Earl of Nottingham, building Burley-on-the-Hill, wrote in 1696 that progress was delayed because his master masons were unable to procure enough freemasons to work and prepare the stone.62 The earl's contemporary, William Blathwayt, faced a similar problem at Dyrham in Gloucestershire. In 1698 his agent visited nearby quarries with the clerk of the works but found that all the masons were fully engaged for the summer.63 His master mason, Philip West of Corsham, scoured the countryside up to a radius of thirty or forty miles looking for men in 1701, reporting to Blathwayt that they were very scarce. In such circumstances it was difficult enough to prevent men leaving, let alone find more. A century later, in 1808-9, skilled workmen were hard to obtain at Parnham (Dorset). Then, during the French wars, country house builders had to compete with the state for men - dockyards alone drew in thousands of carpenters - and it was found necessary to 'advertise' to attract labour. Soldiers were borrowed from Lord Hinton's regiment at Weymouth to supplement the workforce.64 The fluctuating demands of the Crown, backed by the power of impressment, therefore had an effect, as did 'public' construction work during an economic boom, as in 1824-25. Local competition between private builders had also to be faced. Another factor was the seasonality of building, which concentrated the call for labour in the summer months, when the hay and corn harvests also demanded men and waggons. In winter, bad weather and poor roads combined to prevent the movement of materials, frost ruled out the laying of brick and stone, and short days reduced the productivity of day labour. Obviously, men were more attracted to sites which offered the prospect of winter employment, being willing to work by the piece rather than the day in winter to secure it.65 During the eighteenth century, however, the seasonal character of building appears to have become less marked. Transport improvements played a part, but also better organisation and supervision - ensuring that materials were available in good time; moving quickly to get a roof on under which work could be maintained in all weathers; and continuing appropriate and preparatory work in winter, by candlelight if necessary. Substantial numbers of men were employed at Henham and Haveringland throughout the year. At Henham the number of men on site
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fell to ten in the first January, picking up rapidly from mid February. In later years there were forty to fifty men working even in the depth of winter. At Haveringland, a similar sized workforce was employed each winter throughout the project. There is no hint of any problem recruiting labour in the well-documented cases of East Carlton, Henham or Haveringland. Even there, however, it was not possible to find enough men nearby to maintain the desired rate of building progress and there were often local shortages of particular skills. Masons were understandably scarce in East Anglia, a region almost without native building stone.66 But high quality joinery, carving and interior decoration, and the fitting of equipment bought from the metropolis, everywhere demanded imported skills. Workforces were, therefore, necessarily a mixture of local men, itinerant workers, and others recruited from a distance. A multiplicity of labour markets, with agricultural and general labourers' wages differing widely between regions, was to some extent modified from the mid nineteenth century by the practice of tramping and the contribution of the railways in facilitating personal mobility.67 Fast-growing rural populations after 1780, however, with landlords and farmers content to maintain a surplus of labour upon which they could draw at harvest time, depressed wages. These set the level for country house building labourers. Itinerant workers were more attracted by the availability of work than pay differentials, so building projects did not necessarily disturb local market rates. Where he wished to attract highly skilled specialists, however, a builder had to match wage rates elsewhere, pay travelling expenses, and arrange accommodation or pay an allowance for it.68 Never willing to pay higher wages than he had to, William Blathwayt was nevertheless shocked when he found that the London joiner Robert Barker expected a massive 55. per day (and 35. for his men) to attract him to Dyrham, whereas local carpenters were paid only 15. A,d. per day, advanced to 25. if they assisted the London craftsmen.69 In the same decade at other country houses, local carpenters were paid 25. at Levens, near Kendal (Westmorland), 25. 6d. at Milton (Northamptonshire), 15. 3d at Burley-on-the-Hill (Rutland), and 15. id. at Mapperton (Dorset).70 Clearly, large premiums had to be paid to attract skilled men from London. Such direct comparisons between wage rates are not often possible because specialist craftsmen were usually paid by the piece, especially those at the apex of the craft pyramid, the decorative artists. Post-Restoration royal patronage of woodcarvers and Italian and French painters and decorators was emulated by the
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fashion-conscious builders and remodellers of grand houses in the late seventeenth century. Sought-after artist-craftsmen moved from one great house to another. Antonio Verrio and his assistants worked for the Earl of Exeter at Burghley from 1687 to 1697, for his brother-in-law at Chatsworth, and at Lowther Castle.71 Louis Laguerre and his team painted walls and ceilings at Chatsworth, where Jean Tijou provided the metal balustrade for the staircase for £250 in 1688-89.72 The French Huguenot carver Nadauld also worked at Chatsworth in 1700-1, having previously been employed at Hampton Court. In 1705 he arrived at Castle Howard, where he spent four and a half years executing much of the vigorous decoration which so enlivened both the inside and outside of Lord Carlisle's house. He was paid a massive £863 135., presumably including board and lodging and possibly payments to assistants.73 Such specialists worked on a foundation laid by skilled local craftsmen. At Castle Howard in 1709, for example, joiners and carpenters from York were followed by the Italian mural painters Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini and Marco Ricci, who also worked on Lord Manchester's London house and at Kimbolton (Plate 74).74 The engagement of such artists was as much a business arrangement as was the recruitment of lesser tradesmen. The architect of the Mausoleum at Castle Howard, Nicholas Hawksmoor, discussed terms with the Venetian painter Giacomo Amicomi in 1731, covering payments for painting, the extent to which he or his assistants would execute the work, responsibility for the cost of materials, and travelling and board expenses. Amicomi promoted himself with the assertion that Pellegrini would charge more. Hawksmoor subsequently negotiated with Pellegrini, advising Lord Carlisle of Pellegrini's favourable painting rate of £2 per yard, compared with the £3 charged by Sir James Thornhill at Greenwich Hospital.75 In the end, the Mausoleum was not painted. Private clients, whose taste shifted from the iconographic deployment on walls and ceilings of mythical deities, earthly rulers and their triumphs to the more disciplined schemes of the Palladians, nevertheless maintained the demand for elite carvers, stuccoists and decorative artists, exemplified by William Kent's contributions at Houghton and Holkham. In due course, the formers of taste turned to the flowing asymmetry of the rococo style, and the employment of Italian stuccatori and their English counterparts working in plaster and wood. From the 1760s the neoclassical revival reached its artistic climax with Robert Adam. At Harewood, provincial craftsmen laid the base for Adam's artists: Biagio Rebecca depicted classical themes in the library and gallery; Antonio Zucchi worked in the music room, and on ceilings there; wall insets in the gallery were
PLATE 74- Castle Howard, Yorkshire (Sir John Vanbrugh, 1701-12). The doorway of the High Saloon with decorative surrounds attributed to Giovanni Bagutti, giving a view of the balcony of the Great Hall beyond.
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painted by Angelika Kaufrmann. John Devall, George Ill's master-mason, executed marble chimney-pieces. Adam paid these artists directly. How much his bill for them added to the £37,000 that Lascelles's accounts reveal was spent on the house, excluding its furnishings and the park, is not disclosed.76 Even when ambition did not demand, or the depth of the builder's purse precluded, the more expensive forms of interior decoration, it was still necessary to bring to rural building sites skilled men from the metropolis or from a major regional centre like Bristol or York. Architects' favoured craftsmen followed their patron from one project to another. The growth of James Paine's practice from the late 1740s, and his foreshadowing of Robert Adam's complete control over interior design, employing native craftsmen, introduced the Yorkshire plasterers Joseph Rose and Thomas Perritt, and their families, to a wider clientele.77 At Henham, on the evidence of the payment of expenses for travelling or accommodation, thirty men of the 400 or so who worked there (7.5 per cent) were specially recruited.78 London men were paid for the two days it took them to travel to Henham, their coach fare, and the expense of transporting their tools. The cost to a London man of the round trip to Henham was the equivalent of fourteen days' wages, so the importance of these payments is clear. Because such men worked continuously for relatively long periods, they accounted for a higher proportion of the man-days worked (19.3 per cent) than their numbers would suggest. Their share of the wage bill was even greater (30 per cent), because they were the highest paid men on site. The total was therefore significantly influenced by metropolitan rates. Building remained a labour-intensive activity relatively untouched by technological change. The application of levers and block and tackle had long been employed at quayside, quarry and building site for moving and lifting heavy objects, and hand- or horse-driven (and, eventually, steam-powered) machines were used to raise the heavy weights to be dropped for pile-driving.79 But craftsmen's tools changed little and what advances there were tended to be offsite in the development of continuous brick-making, for example, and the application of steam power to the sawing of wood, repetitive joinery, and even, by the mid nineteenth century, the copying of carved work.80 As John Crace wrote to Lord Crewe in 1869, having visited Cubitt's works in London to inspect work done for the restoration of Crewe Hall: [I had] pointed out to me the various works now in progress for Crewe Hall. I cannot but express to your Lordship how much I was delighted with the perfection of the
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workmanship and the beauty and great variety of the designs. The application of ingenious machinery has enabled work to be accomplished which would not have been expected some years ago ... the surfaces of the woodwork are so even and the mouldings and mitreings so exactly true.81 Even without improved technology, substantial increases in productivity could be achieved within the wasteful and archaic nature of the building industry by better organisation.82 The professionalisation of architecture, project administration and supervision played a part, but the better organisation of labour was the key. Progress and discipline could be a problem, especially when the employer was absent. The work rises slowly without I'm here often', bemoaned John Buxton of Shadwell Lodge in 1727.83 The celebration of 'St Monday' and overindulgence at traditional fairs and feasts persisted. William Blathwayt's agent at Dyrham despaired of getting things done in July 1702 when a great part of the workforce was drunk and incapable. He lost more of the men a week later after celebrations at Box. News reached William Denison in Leeds that his foreman and labourers at Ossington (Nottinghamshire) had spent all day drinking at Sutton feast and 'put down both his own and their labour to my account'.84 At Dyrham, Blathwayt generally had a poor opinion of his workforce and believed in keeping wages back: These people want stirring up roundly and not to be overfed with money'. And he instructed his agent: 'You must not be too liberal if you want the work to go on.' Men were fined for lateness or slacking, but the stick was ineffective at times of labour shortage or when particular skills and experience were at a premium.85 Unsurprisingly, the men themselves were not happy. 'Sir we are in great want of money', wrote the masons Thomas Simpson and Richard Broad desperately in 1703 when they saw what big reductions had been made to the bill they had submitted. The mason Philip West threatened to stop work unless more money was received; and men from Chippenham had to be given the hope of a pay rise as an inducement to stay. Attempts were made to prevent those deemed to have left unreasonably from working elsewhere. Blathwayt was incensed when the London joiner Alexander Hunter left Dyrham to do some work in Bristol and instructed his agent to speak to the other employer about it, but Hunter made it clear to the Dyrham clerk of the works that he would not return to a master who sought to bar him from all other work. At Parnham (Dorset) in 1808 Stephen Peach, the labourers' foreman, was paid 65. 6d. expenses for a journey to Chard to summon back men who had left their work.
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The ultimate sanction was recorded in the building accounts three weeks later: 'Paid the town cryer for crying a man who had absented himself from his work. 15/86
Organised labour disputes seem not, in fact, to have affected country house building to any great extent. Combinations in the building trades were virtually unknown before the end of the eighteenth century and craftsmen's strikes were an urban phenomenon.87 As the nineteenth century progressed the strength of organised labour increased but men on an isolated site in the country were in a weak bargaining position and clerks of the works tried not to employ potentially disruptive London workmen.88 However, after a strike of union members in 1839 at Merevale Hall (Warwickshire) all were sacked and replaced by a more compliant workforce. James Firth, who was supervising alterations at Everingham (Yorkshire, East Riding) in 1846, had to travel to York to deal with joiners who were demanding an increase in wages.89 At Hemsted House (Kent) in 1859, men dissatisfied with the food they were given worked noisily through the foundation ceremony conducted by the parson, and struck for higher wages in the following year. In August i860, at Ickworth (Suffolk), the London contractor R.J. Waller, anxious to relate some good news since his men had mistakenly clad the west wing with scaffolding when they should have been working on the east wing, wrote to Lord Bristol that a general strike by metropolitan building workers was imminent but that their country work would not be affected in any way.90 Some masons, bricklayers and scaffolders walked out at Westonbirt (Gloucestershire) in 1865, after seeking an extra 6d. per day, but the clerk of the works believed that it was principally the travelling union men who caused trouble and that, with winter coming on, all were well aware of the difficulty of getting work elsewhere, and that therefore the best policy was to resist demands.91 The disciplinary prospect of unemployment and the wielding of the employer's stick were sometimes balanced by the constructive use of the carrot. Generous amounts of food and drink were provided at key stages of construction. Fifty men sat down to dinner in February 1826, for example, to celebrate the raising of the roof at Eshton (Yorkshire, West Riding). They were entertained by two musicians from Skipton and drank twenty-six-and-a-half bottles of rum and sixteen gallons of strong ale. At this stage the majority of them must have been totally incapable for the steward had bought a whole hogshead (fifty-four gallons). 'An error in [his] calculations', recorded Mathew Wilson primly, revealing that poor predictions were not restricted to building costs.92 The Duke of Northumberland
172
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entertained his workmen at Alnwick with a dinner every November at a cost of 45. 6d. per head.93 Favoured tradesmen might receive bonuses from time to time or leaving presents. John Rous at Henham rewarded his London men, and Sir William Oglander Bt gave his foreman at Parnham (Dorset) one guinea as a Christmas present in 1808.94 With many different trades represented on the country house building site, with a range of skills within each occupation, and with some men recruited locally and others travelling long distances, the pattern of wage rates was complex. The evidence of day labour payments alone provides an incomplete picture. It is seldom practicable to deduce equivalent day rates from the payments made to pieceworkers. Their earnings depended not only on pay rates but on the speed at which they were able to or chose to work. Where the piece-workers were the more skilled men on site, a study only of day rates will fail to represent the prevailing earnings for the most proficient craftsmen.95 From those projects where day labour was the rule, but occasional references made to day rates paid to craftsmen who usually worked by the piece, an overall view can be obtained. The picture is more involved, however, than the relatively orderly series of wage rates over seven centuries derived for a typical southern English location.96 Beyond Oxford, the main source of the published data, there were considerable regional differences, and the pattern of wage rates became less clear when the labour market was moving and new engagements were made at rising marginal prices. Nevertheless, the ratio of craftsmen's to labourers' wage was remarkably stable at 3:2, although other work has indicated that it was 2:1. There also appear to have been shifts in the proportion in the towns of northern England between 1450 and 1750.97 There the evidence supports both views, with the 3:2 ratio widening in some towns from the mid seventeenth century, when craftsmen's rates advanced rapidly to at least double the pay of the labourers, although the latter made up some ground in the early eighteenth century. Within the three hundred year period, northern labourers and building craftsmen were always paid less than their London counterparts, but more than southern men outside the metropolis. Country house building projects were large impositions on rural labour markets. Whereas unskilled men might be hired without disturbing local rates, a marginal demand price was more likely to apply to craftsmen, especially at times of peak activity. Country house projects do not therefore offer a simple basis for regional comparisons and, given the engagement of men from both rural and urban locations, differentials were significantly wider than in a stable labour market.
A PLEASURE
NOT
TO BE
ENVIED
173
Within each trade there were groups of men of different origins paid on different scales. They reflected levels of skill - master, journeyman, labourer, apprentice - and also local market rates for some, besides the higher wages needed to attract skilled itinerant craftsmen.** Moreover, there were seasonal wage variations. These seem to have depended upon local practice in relation to the length of the working day, and upon the need to match harvest earnings when labour was scarce. At Dyrham in the 1690s William Blathwayt's labourers received 8d. per day in December and January, advancing to md. after Candlemas and to is. from late June for the harvest.* Those labourers who worked temporarily as carpenters experienced similar wage variations. Their high summer rate (15. 6d.) and evidence elsewhere in the accounts suggests a local market rate for carpenters in south Gloucestershire of close to the is. 6d. rising by 1710 to 15. 8d., which has been shown to be the general rate for building craftsmen in southern England around 1700.100 At any period, however, between 1660 and 1870 the most significant feature which leaps out from the building accounts was the different payments rewarding different skills. In the 1720s at Crowcombe in Somerset the masons were the most highly paid, at 25. 6d. per day, with joiners 25., carpenters is. 6d. and labourers is. 101 Wolterton (Plate 75) labourers in 1738 were also paid is. per day (is. 2d. in the garden), but even the general run of craftsmen were paid as much as 90 per cent more than the labourers: in 1738 the Wolterton carpenter was paid is. lod. and his man is. 8d.; a bricklayer and his labourer were given 3s. per day together. But masons and carvers skilled in working marble could command much higher pay. William Roberts, paid the large sums of £75 for carving the chimney-piece in the saloon (Plate 76) and £60 for that in the south-west corner room at Wolterton, received a guinea a week (35. 6d. per day) for 'setting up fruit and
PLATE 75.
Wolterton Hall, Norfolk (Thomas Ripley, 1727-41)-
174
CREATING
PARADISE
PLATE 76.
Wolterton Hall, Norfolk. The saloon chimney-piece.
foliage in middle room East'. Thomas Yeoman, a mason, received £28 125. for polishing and fixing the saloon chimney-piece, and 25. 8d. (and his labourer 15. 8d.) when paid by the day. By the last quarter of the eighteenth century most general rates had advanced somewhat. At East Carlton (Northamptonshire), although two masons were paid 25. 6d., the same as at Crowcombe fifty years earlier, two carpenters received 25. 8d., and a bricklayer (probably including his labourer) as much as 35. 6d. to 45. The general rate for all three trades was 25. Labourers wages varied seasonally from 15. per day in winter to as much as 25. at harvest time.102 At Henham in the 1790s, London bricklayers and joiners were paid 35. 6d. per day plus 15. per week lodging allowance, masons 35. 3d. and plasterers 35. od. per week. Local bricklayers and carpenters were paid 25., with the prevailing rate for labourers being 15. 4 61. 45. Colvin, Biographical Dictionary, pp. 24-25. 46. Alan Mackley, 'Building Management at Dyrham', Georgian Group Journal, 7 (1997), pp. 107-16. 47. Gunther, Architecture of Sir Roger Pratt, p. 47. 48. Howard Colvin and John Newman, Of Building: Roger North's Writings on Architecture (Oxford, 1981), p. 23. 49. Christopher Chalklin, English Counties and Public Building, 1650-1830 (London, 1998), pp. 67-91. 50. Ibid., p. 78. 51. John Shaw, T h e Finance and Construction of the East Anglian Houses of Industry', Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and History, 37 (1992), pp. 351-65. 52. Chalklin, English Building, p. 84; J. Mordaunt Crook, 'The Custom House Scandal', Architectural History, 6 (1963), pp. 91-102. 53. Mackley 'Dyrham'; Geoffrey Beard, Craftsmen and Interior Decoration in England in England, 1660-1820 (London, 1986), p. 144. See also pp. 302-4 below. 54. Mark Girouard, 'Dyrham Park, Gloucestershire', Country Life, 131, 22 February 1962, p. 398. 55. J. A. Kenworthy-Browne (revised by J. Harris and N. Stacey), Dyrham Park, The National Trust (London, 1995), pp. 34-35. 56. Northamptonshire RO, OBB 12. 57. Colvin, Biographical Dictionary, p. 860. 58. Northamptonshire RO, Milton Plans 91, letter John Sharman to Earl Fitzwilliam, 10 January 1747/?48. 59. Northamptonshire RO, 2328. 60. Berkshire RO, Preston MSS D/EPi. 61. Colvin, Biographical Dictionary, p. 151. 62. John Summerson, Architecture in Britain, 1530 to 1830 (Harmondsworth, 1953), p. 222. 63. Julia Ionides, 'Mr Pritchard of Shrewsbury', in Malcolm Airs (ed.), The Later Eighteenth-Century Great House (Oxford, 1997), pp. 156-71. See also Julia Ionides, Thomas Farnolls Pritchard of Shrewsbury: Architect and 'Inventor of Cast Iron Bridges' (Ludlow, 1999). 64. Colvin, Biographical Dictionary, pp. 882-90. 65. John Heward and Robert Taylor, The Country Houses of Northamptonshire, Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England (Swindon, 1996), pp. 256-62. 66. Northamptonshire RO, IL 4168. 67. Northamptonshire RO, IL 3965.
378
NOTES TO PAGES
132-138
68. Andor Gomme, 'William and David Hiorn, 1712-1776, ?-i758: The Elegance of Provincial Craftsmanship', in Roderick Brown (ed.), The Architectural Outsiders (London, 1985), pp. 45-62. 69. Colvin, Biographical Dictionary, p. 752. 70. Ibid., pp. 391-92. 71. Lyall Wilkes, John Dobson (Stocksfield, 1980), pp. 99-110. 72. Colvin, Biographical Dictionary, p. 270; E. W. Cooney, 'The Origins of the Victorian Master Builders', Economic History Review, second series, 8 (1955-56), pp. 167-76. 73. Hermione Hobhouse, Thomas Cubitt: Master Builder (London, 1971); Cooney, 'Master Builders'. 74. A stream of price books flowed from the early eighteenth century. William Salmon's Country Builder's Estimator, published in 1733 and the first to be wholly devoted to builders' prices, was reprinted many times in the next forty years. Thomas Skaife Taylor's Builders' Price Book of 1776 was, in its many editions, a standard work for over a century. Harris, Architectural Books, pp. 43-45, 133. 75. Cooney, 'Master Builders', p. 175. 76. M. H. Port, 'The Office of Works and Building Contracts in Early Nineteenth-Century England', Economic History Review, second series, 20 (1967), pp. 94-110. Nash was chosen by King George IV for the reconstruction of Buckingham Palace (1825-30) but the expenditure became a public scandal and the architect was criticised by a Select Committee of the House of Commons in 1828 for his mismanagement. J. Mordaunt Crook and M. H. Port, The History of the King's Works, vi (London, 1973), pp. 263-302. The building contractor for Pell Wall House (Staffordshire), designed by John Soane for Purney Sillitoe, 1822-28, wisely had second thoughts about his agreement to complete the interior of the house for a fixed price. When it became clear that it could not be done for the contracted £4009, John Carline junior wrote to Soane that his father had made the estimate on work he knew too little about and 'thinks it right to communicate this much previous to the commencement as the execution of the work would be but deceiving Mr Sillitoe and yourself and ruin to my father'. Soane Museum, Pell Wall correspondence, J/8/1. 77. Soane, Plans, p. 7. 78. Writing years later the combative Robert Kerr was scathing of this amateur effort. For want of the mere elementary counsel of an expert, he asserted, it overflowed with errors - 'a warning indeed'! There was 'more imbecile conventional symmetry than even Palladianism itself would have produced'. Although allowing that the design was remarkably bold for its day, Kerr saw the result as a matter of regret to all who respected the memory of the designer. Robert Kerr, The Gentleman's House (London, 1871), pp. 427-30. 79. Nicholas Kingsley, The Country Houses of Gloucestershire, ii, 1660-1830 (Chichester, 1992), pp. 249-53. 80. Jill Allibone, Anthony Salvin: Pioneer of Gothic Revival Architecture (Cambridge, 1988), pp. 40-52. 81. Ibid., p. 84. 82. Lord de Grey's architectural activity did not end there. He was President of the Institute of British Architects and, as a leading Conservative peer, was a member of the commission charged with controlling expenditure on extensions to Buckingham Palace in the 1840s. He modified Blore's elevations for the new east wing, his interference leading to the architect's threat to resign in 1849. The connections within the building business are well displayed in Lord de Grey's unpublished memoirs: 'Blore was the architect, and I thought him a very inefficient man [not a commonly held view]. Thomas Cubitt of Belgravia was the builder,
NOTES TO PAGES
138-146
379
and I thought him a very superior intelligent person; and Oliver who had [been] my clerk of the works at Wrest was the clerk of the works under Blore.' Mordaunt Crook and Port, King's Works, vi, p. 290, quoting Bedfordshire RO, CRT 190/45/2. See also ibid., pp. 229, 289, and James Collett-White, 'Inventories of Bedfordshire Country Houses, 1714-1830', Publications 83. 84. 85. 86. 87.
of the Bedfordshire Historical Record Society, 74 (1995), pp. 250-51. Berkshire RO, D/EWal E12 (building accounts) and E13 (letters). Hobhouse, Thomas Cubitt, p. 376. Ibid., pp. 396-97. Ibid., p. 463. Patricia Spencer-Silver, Pugin's Builder: The Life and Work of George Myers (Hull, 1993), pp. 78,
86, 173. 88. Alan Mackley, The Building of Haveringland Hall', Norfolk Archaeology, 43 (1999), pp. 111-32. 89. Somerset RO, DD/DU127. See below, pp. 328-30. 90. Northamptonshre RO, IL 2765, N. i. 12; Mark Girouard, The Victorian Country House (New Haven and London, 1979), p. 420. Holland and Hannen took over the firm of William Cubitt and Co. in 1883. 91. Cheshire RO, DGN. 92. Somerset RO, DD/DU 127. 93. Somerset RO, DD/DU 163. 94. Ranald C. Michie, 'Income, Expenditure and Investment of a Victorian Millionaire: Lord Overstone, 1823-83', Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, 58 (1985), pp. 59-77. 95. John Bateman, The Great Landowners of Great Britain and Ireland (London. 1883; reprinted Leicester, 1971), p. 348. 96. Quoted by Jill Franklin, The Gentleman's Country House and its Plan, 1835-1914 (London, 1981), p. 245.
Notes to Chapter 5: A Pleasure Not to be Envied 1. Sir William Chambers, A Treatise on the Decorative Part of Civil Architecture (3rd edn, London, 1791), p. ii. 2. Rudyard Kipling, 'A Truthful Song', Rudyard Kipling's Verse (London, 1940), p. 654. 3. Sir Balthazar Gerbier, A BriefDiscourse Concerning the Three Chief Principles of Magnificent Building
(London, 1662), p. 3. 4. H. J. Habakkuk, 'Daniel Finch, Second Earl of Nottingham: His House and Estate', in J. H. Plumb (ed.), Studies in Social History (London, 1955), p. 152. 5. Suffolk RO, Bury St Edmunds, E2/23/5, letter from Henry Oakes to Sir Thomas Cullum, 15 January 1839. 6. Buckinghamshire RO, D/FR 22/1/1, letter from Henry Wilson to Sir Thomas Fremantle, Stowlangtoft, 16 September 1864. Quoted by Jill Franklin in The Gentleman's Country House and its Plan, 1835-1914 (London, 1981), p. 121. 7. Detailed estimates were a late development. Nash told the 1831 Select Committee on Windsor Castle and Buckingham Palace that architects never made that sort of estimate in the first instance. J. Mordaunt Crook and M. H. Port, The History of the King's Works, vi, VJ82-1851 (London, 1973), p. 145. 8. The evolution of the clerk of the works's role in royal service is discussed in R. Allen Brown,
380
NOTES TO PAGES
146-I5O
H. M. Colvin and A.J. Taylor, The History of the King's Works, i, The Middle Ages (London, 1963), pp. 164-201, and H. M. Colvin, D. R. Ransome and John Summerson, The History of the King's Works, iii, 1485-1660, part 1 (London, 1975), pp. 5-24. Their position in private practice has been neglected by architectural historians, except to note that in the evolution of the architectural profession, some clerks of the works emerged as architects in their own right. Alan Mackley, 'Clerks of the Works', Georgian Group Journal, 8 (1998), pp. 157-66. 9. William of Wykeham became a clerk of the works in 1356. By 1367 he was both Chancellor and Bishop of Winchester. Chaucer was clerk of the works from 1389 to 1391. 10. It is not certain that Nedeham was appointed for his technical knowledge but under Henry VIII there was a clear shift away from churchmen to the employment of paid laymen. Nedeham's successor, Richard Lee, may have come from a family of masons, advancing himself socially and financially in the post. Colvin et al, King's Works, iii, pp. 11-14. 11. R. T. Gunther (ed.), The Architecture of Sir Roger Pratt, Charles IT's Commissioner for the Rebuilding of London after the Great Fire: Now Printed for the First Time from his Note-Books (Oxford, 1928), pp.47-48. 12. H. M. Colvin andj. Newman (eds), Of Building: Roger North's Writings on Architecture (Oxford, 1981), p. 22. 13. Worsley's reward for his amateur enthusiasm for architecture came in 1760, when he was appointed by his old friend the Prime Minister, Lord Bute, to the Surveyor-Generalship of the Office of Works. Giles Worsley, 'Hovingham Hall, Yorkshire', Country Life, 188, 15 September 1994, pp. 90-93 and 22 September 1994, pp. 56-61. See pp. 336-40 below. 14. Cambridge University Library, Buxton Papers, letter from John Buxton to Robert Buxton, 1 May 1727. 15. Gordon Smith, Cusworth Hall (Doncaster, 1968), p. 6. 16. D. R. Hainsworth, Stewards, Lords and People (Cambridge, 1992), pp. 236-50. 17. D. R. Hainsworth and Cherry Walker (eds), 'The Correspondence of Lord Fitzwilliam of Milton and Francis Guybon, his Steward 1697-1709', Northamptonshire Record Society, 36 (1990); Hainsworth, Stewards, pp. 237-38. 18. Joan Wake and Deborah Champion Webster (eds), T h e Letters of Daniel Eaton to the Third Earl of Cardigan, 1725-1732', Northamptonshire Record Society, 24 (1971). 19. The Blathwayt papers, including letters and estate accounts for the period of the rebuilding of Dyrham, are in Gloucestershire RO, D1799. The project is discussed in Alan Mackley, 'Building Management at Dyrham', Georgian Group Journal, 7 (1997), pp. 107-16. 20. For example, William Atkinson at Lowther Hall in 1694 (Hainsworth, Stewards, p. 238). Samuel Popplewell, Edwin Lascelles's steward when Harewood House was built from 1755, found himself bewildered by the multiplicity of duties expected of him when adding the role of clerk of the works to his other tasks. Mary Mauchline, Harewood House (Newton Abbot, 1974), p. 30. 21. Howard Colvin, A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects, 1600-1840 (New Haven and London, 1995), pp. 818-20. 22. Ibid., pp. 354, 721, 978,1124; Derek Linstrum, West Yorkshire Architects and Architecture (London, 1978), p. 31. The process continued from father to son. When William Etty, clerk of the works at Castle Howard, died in 1734, his son John (who was to die in 1738) was recommended by Hawksmoor to Lord Carlisle as 'sober, carefull, ingenious, and industrious'. Geoffrey Webb, 'The Letters and Drawings of Nicholas Hawksmoor Relating to the Building of the
NOTES TO PAGES
I5O-157
381
Mausoleum at Castle Howard, 1726-1742', Walpole Society, 19 (Oxford, 1931), p. 148. James Paine employed his own son as clerk of the works at Thorndon Hall (1764-70). Malcolm Airs, The Tudor and Jacobean Country House: A Building History (Stroud, 1995), p. 72, discusses the emergence of surveyors from craft backgrounds in the seventeenth century. 23. Richard Wilson and Alan Mackley, 'Founding a Landed Dynasty, Building a Country House: The Rolfes of Heacham in the Eighteenth Century', in Carole Rawcliffe, Roger Virgoe and Richard Wilson (eds), Counties and Communities: Essays on East Anglian History Presented to Hassell Smith (Norwich, 1996), pp. 307-25. 24. For Henham there is the rare survival of a near complete set of clerk of the works's reports: Suffolk RO, Ipswich, HA11, Rous family papers, C7/1-2. The Henham project is described in Alan Mackley, The Construction of Henham Hall', Georgian Group Journal, 6 (1996), pp. 85-96. The Marsdens appear to have been an estate family. An Elizabeth Marsden travelled the twenty-one miles to Great Yarmouth in January 1795 to buy a feather bed, blankets and a coverlet Tor the greenhouse', the cost being charged to the building account. A Rufus Alexander Marsden began work in April 1796 at the boy's wage of one shilling per day. 25. Leeds University Library, MS 417/7, Mathew Wilson's day book, 1823-25, entry for 24 December 1824. 26. Dorothy Stroud, Henry Holland: His Life and Architecture (London, 1966), p. 131. 27. The correspondence between George Freke Evans and Humphry Repton is in Northamptonshire RO, X. 2830A, Freke Evans (Laxton) collection. 28. The building of Sheringham Hall is described in a journal kept by Abbot Upcher, Norfolk RO, UPC55. The building accounts are in UPC27 and 38, 640 x 4. Extracts from the journal have been published as Susan Yaxley (ed.), Sherringhamia: The Journal of Abbot Upcher, 1813-16 (Stibbard, 1986). 29. Cheshire RO, D2781. 30. Colvin, Biographical Dictionary, pp. 1121-23. 31. The dispute between Lord Sherborne and Lewis Wyatt is documented in Gloucestershire RO, D678/322, Sherborne Muniments, Sherborne Family Settlements. 32. Lord Sherborne compiled a long list of defects in the structure and its finishing and asserted that for at least two years he and his family had been harassed and 'kept in a state worse than houseless'. The arbitrators were London architects Thomas Allason (for Lord Sherborne) and Joseph Kay (secretary of the London Architects' Club), with recourse to Sir Robert Smirke if they failed to agree. The penalty is noted by Clive Aslet, in 'Sherborne House, Gloucestershire', Country Life, 179, 20 March 1986, pp. 720-23. Wyatt's habitual detachment from his projects is further indicated by his writing about Oulton Park (Cheshire), which he altered from 1817 for Sir John Egerton. In 1821 he stated that he had very little information about what had been done in the previous twelve months, and in 1822 he could not calculate his commission because he lacked information about expenditure (Cheshire RO, DEO 200/4). 33. Nicholas Kingsley, The Country Houses of Gloucestershire, i, 1500-1660 (Cheltenham, 1989), p. 154; David Verey, The Buildings of England, Gloucestershire, ii, The Vale and The Forest of Dean (Harmondsworth, 1970), pp. 385-86; Jill Allibone, Anthony Salvin: Pioneer of Gothic Revival Architecture, 1J99-1881 (Cambridge, 1988), p. 165. 34. The correspondence between Antrobus and Wyatt is in Cheshire RO, D2781. 35. Cheshire RO, D2781/152, letter 1 February 1828, from Lewis Wyatt to G. C. Antrobus. 36. Peter de Figueiredo and Julian Treuherz, Cheshire Country Houses (Chichester, 1988), p. 233.
382
NOTES TO PAGES
158-161
37. Norfolk RO, MS 8595 20B, Haveringland Hall building accounts. A complete set of the clerk of the works's reports has survived, supported by numerous account books. 38. Richard Armstrong was also alert to the value of a discount. Samuel Thomas, a Birmingham locksmith, wrote to him on 9 January 1843: 'In answer to yours of the 6th inst. that an allowance of 5 per ct will reduce my slender profit very seriously but for prompt cash payment I will make the sacrifice feeling grateful for your kindness.' The net sum was £67 155. 6d., for goods supplied between 25 April 1841 and 12 November 1842. Thus the 'prompt' payment was, in part, for goods supplied nearly two years before (Norfolk RO, MS 8595 20B, box 2). 39. Three stonemasons, paid 35. 6d. per day, enjoyed another 6d. when they moved to Shadwell (Norfolk); and two others increased their pay from 25. 6d. to 35. 6d. One plasterer moved to Shadwell for the same wage and another increased his from 35. PP- 20> 12,1. 4. F. M. L. Thompson, 'The End of a Great Estate', Economic History Review, second series, 8 (1955), pp. 36-37, 50-52. 5. D. Cannadine, 'The Landowner as Millionaire: The Finances of the Dukes of Devonshire, c. 1800 - c. 1926', Agricultural History Review, 25 (1977), pp. 77-97; E. Richards, 'An Anatomy of the Sutherland Fortune: Income, Consumption, Investments and Returns, 1780-1880', Business History, 21 (1979), pp. 45-78; idem, The Leviathan of Wealth: The Sutherland Fortune in the Industrial Revolution (London, 1973); D. Spring, The English Landed Estate in the Nineteenth Century (Baltimore, 1963); F. M. L. Thompson, 'English Landownership: The Ailesbury Trust, 1832-56', Economic History Review, second series, 11 (1958), pp. 121-32; idem, 'End of a Great Estate'; J. T. Ward, 'The Earls Fitzwilliam and the Wentworth Woodhouse Estate in the Nineteenth Century', Yorkshire Bulletin of Economic and Social Research, 12 (i960), pp. 19-27. 6. H.J. Habakkuk, 'Daniel Finch, Second Earl of Nottingham: His House and Estate', in J. H. Plumb (ed.), Studies in Social History (London, 1955), p. 163. In this seminal study of building a great country house, Sir John went on to show that Burley was bought and built from the proceeds of high political office and the sale of property. See pp. 300-2 below. 7. Malcolm Airs, The Tudor and Jacobean Country House: A Building History (Stroud, 1995), pp. 82, 100-3.
400
NOTES TO PAGES
3OO-313
8. This section on the financing of Burley-on-the-Hill comes from Sir John Habakkuk's study, 'Daniel Finch', pp. 141-78. See also James Lees-Milne, English Country Houses: Baroque, 1685-1715 (London, 1970), pp. 112-18. 9. For Blathwayt's career and the building of Dyrham, see G. A.Jacobsen, William Blathwayt: A Late Seventeenth-Century English Administrator (New Haven, 1932); John Kenworthy-Browne, Dyrham Park (National Trust, 1995); James Lees-Milne, English Country Houses: Baroque, pp. 85-94; Mark Girouard, 'Dyrham Park, Gloucestershire', Country Life, 131 (1962), pp. 335-91, 396-99; and Alan Mackley, 'Building Management at Dyrham', Georgian Group Journal, 7 (1997), pp. 107-16. 10. Jacobsen, William Blathwayt, pp. 53-54; Gloucestershire RO, D1799/C8, letter from William Blathwayt to Sir Robert Southwell, 28 September 1686. 11. Jacobsen, William Blathwayt, pp. 435-68. 12. John Harris, William Talman: Maverick Architect (London, 1982), end page. 13. Lees-Milne, English Country Houses: Baroque, pp. 237-38; Mackley, 'Building Management', p. 112.
14. Jacobsen, William Blathwayt, p. 435. 15. Gloucestershire RO, D1799/100, inventories of William Blathwayt's estate in the public funds, 5 April 1705, 24 January 1714/15; 18 February 1714/15 and 26 June 1716. The estates (he obtained the reversion of the Wynter's Somerset estate in 1707) produced a gross £2263 in 1717, Gloucestershire RO, D1799/F92, schedule of estate, 20 June 1717. 16. This section on Castle Howard is based upon Charles Saumarez Smith, The Building of Castle Howard (London, 1990) and Laurence Whistler, The Imagination of Vanbrugh and his Fellow Artists (London, 1954). 17. Quoted in Saumarez Smith, Castle Howard, p. 75. 18. Ibid., p. 84. 19. Ibid., p. 149. 20. See pp. 70-72 above and Chapter 3, note 37. This section relies heavily upon R. A. C. Parker, Coke of Norfolk: A Financial and Agricultural Study, iyoy-1842 (Oxford, 1975), pp. 1-70. 21. Ibid., p. 23. 22. For Audley End see Audley End (English Heritage, 1997); J. D. Williams, Audley End: The Restoration of 1J62-9J (Colchester 1966); idem, 'The Finances of an Eighteenth-Century Nobleman', Essex Archaeology and History, 9 (1977), pp. 113-25; and idem, 'A Pattern of Land Accumulation: The Audley End Experience, 1762-97', Essex Archaeology and History, 11 (1979), pp. 90-100. 23. It was examples of incomes like Sir John's which led Sir G. N. Clark to conclude, 'it is hard to find a class of mere landlords', in The Wealth of England from 1496 to ij6o (London, 1946), p. 159. 24. The identifiable total of his army pay and profits was £25,617 between 1763 and 1797. But over a period of fifty-eight years, which included thirty-six years after he had retired from active service, his income from this source was considerable. 25. Sir John had represented Andover in the House of Commons from 1749 until 1784. 26. J. M. Rosenheim, The Townshends ofRaynham (Middletown, Connecticut, 1989), pp. 187-88. 27. The Sledmere estate is discussed in Barbara English, The Great Landowners of East Yorkshire, 1530-1910 (Hemel Hempstead, 1990), passim; J. Fairfax-Blakeborough, Sykes of Sledmere (London, 1929); and J. Popham, 'Sir Christopher Sykes at Sledmere', Country Life, 179, 16 January, 23 January 1986, pp. 128-32, 188-91.
NOTES TO PAGES
314-324
40 I
28. Popham, 'Christopher Sykes', p. 191. 29. Gentleman's Magazine, 71 (1801), p. 1049. 30. In the 1870s their descendants were amongst the top half-dozen east Yorkshire landowners; the Sykeses with 34,010 and Denisons (Lord Londesborough) with 33,006 acres were the county's leading owners. Harrison Broadley possessed 14,877 acres. English, Great Landowners, p-3i. 31. In addition, Sir Christopher's own rents from settled estates were £3275 and £401 from unsettled ones. Hull University, DD54 98/142, account book of Sir Christopher Sykes, 1770-1800.
32. See Table 19, note c. 33. L. B. Namier and J. Brooke, History of Parliament: House of Commons, 1754-1790, iii (London, 1964), p. 514. 34. A. Suckling, The History and Antiquities of the Hundreds ofBlything and Part of Lothingland in the County of Suffolk (London, 1847), p. 350; R. Lawrence, Southwold River: Georgian Life in the Blyth Valley (Exeter, 1990), pp. 32-43; H. Honour, 'James Byres's Plans for Rebuilding Henham Hall', in H. M. Colvin and J. Harris (eds), The Country Seat (London, 1970), pp. 164-69. 35. BL, Add. MS 19233, fos 26, 28-29, 30-34, 37-38. 36. R. G. Thorne, The History of Parliament: The House of Commons, 1790-1820, v (London, 1986), pp. 56-57. 37. BL, Add. MS 19233, fos 46-47, 57-58, 96-97. 38. BL, Add. MS 19233, fos 90-91, 100-1, 126-27; Suffolk RO, Ipswich, HA11 C6/1/3, general account book, 1788-94. 39. Alan Mackley, T h e Construction of Henham Hall', Georgian Group Journal, 6 (1996), pp. 85-96. 40. Lawrence, Southwold River, p. 37. 41. Cambridgeshire RO, Huntingdon, Ace. 2470 R35/5/1. 42. Gervase Jackson-Stops, 'Englefield House, Berkshire - III', Country Life, 169, 12 March 1981, pp. 642-45. 43. Cambridgeshire RO, Huntingdon, Ace. 2470 R40/6/2; RB3/36-37 and 3/47-48; Norfolk RO, MS 8595 20B. 44. Cambridgeshire RO, Huntingdon, Ace 2470, RB 3/36-7; John Bateman, The Great Landowners of Great Britain and Ireland (London, 1883; reprinted Leicester, 1971), p. 160. In 1883 the Norfolk estate produced an average rental of 175. 6d. per acre, the Huntingdonshire ones £1 85. 3d. 45. R. Pares, 'A London West India Merchant House', in R. A. and E. Humphreys (eds), The Historian's Business and Other Essays (Oxford, 1961). 46. Romney Sedgwick, The History of Parliament: The House of Commons, 1715-1754, ii (London, 1970), pp. 199-200.
47. This account of the building of Harewood House is taken from M. Mauchline, Harewood House (Newton Abbot, 1974). 48. M. W. Thompson (ed.), The Journeys of Sir Richard Colt Hoare through Wales and England, 1793-1810 (Gloucester, 1983), p. 124; R. Warner, A Tour through the Northern Counties of England and the Borders of Scotland, i (Bath, 1802), pp. 241-42. 49. Joseph Farington's Diary quoted in V. Gibbs (ed.), Complete Peerage, vi (London, 1926), p. 311. 50. For Southill, see p. 42 above; for Dodington see C. Hussey, English Country Houses: Late Georgian, 1800-1840 (London, 1958), pp. 41-54; and N. Kingsley, The Country Houses of Gloucestershire, ii, 1660-1830 (Chichester, 1992), pp. 118-23.
402
NOTES TO PAGES
325-331
51. Uniquely there are two Codrington of Dodington baronetcies, one dated 1721, the second created for Christopher Codrington's descendants in 1876, although the two previous generations had claimed and assumed the title of the older baronetcy. 52. Gloucestershire RO, D1610/E145. 53. Hussey, Late Georgian, p. 42. 54. Gloucestershire RO, D1610/A96-97. 55. Hussey, Late Georgian, p. 42, and Kingsley, Gloucestershire, ii, p. 119. Wyatt was paid over £4000, which suggests an £80,000 commission, if the sum does not include travel. 56. Hussey, Late Georgian, p. 53. 57. Gloucestershire RO, D1610/A96-97. 58. Gloucestershire RO, D1610/A76-77, E145. 59. Hussey, Late Georgian, p. 42, repeated by Kingsley. Nor is it likely that the estate workforce was responsible for anything more than the usual labouring and routine tasks. 60. Quoted in Mauchline, Harewood House, p. 22. 61. Gloucestershire RO, D1610/E145. 62. Bateman, Great Landowners, pp. 98, 207. 63. Burke's Landed Gentry (15th edn, London, 1937), pp. 651-52. 64. Somerset RO, DD/DU163 inscribed by the Revd W. H. Duckworth, 'my father's valuation of his Property and Income'. 65. He initially seems to have borrowed £64,000 at 4 per cent, but by September 1856 sales of stocks and shares had allowed him to pay the remaining purchase money. He reckoned the estate, two manors and the advowsons produced £2500 net. 66. M. Girouard, The Victorian Country House (New Haven and London, 1979), p. 415; Bateman, Great Landowners, p. 140. 67. The building of Brodsworth was funded by the payout to Charles Sabine Augustus The Uusson of a legacy from the notorious will of his great-grandfather Peter Thellusson (1737U97), a London banker and West India merchant of Swiss origin, who purchased the Brodsworth estate. After providing £100,000 for his wife and children, he left between £600,000 and £800,000 in trust to accumulate during the lives of his sons and grandsons, and any great-grandchildren living at the time of his death. On the death of the last survivor, the estate was to be divided equally between 'the eldest male lineal descendants of his three sons then living'. There being no great-grandchildren living at the time of his death, the trust was limited to two generations. Alarm that so vast a landed estate should be held by one family (one computation being that the accumulated value could be as much as £140,000,000) led to the passing of the Thellusson Act' (39 8c 40 George III cap. 98) which prevented any testator from accumulating property for more than twenty-one years after his death. In the event, the value of the estate hardly increased at all, due, it has been argued, to 'accidents of management'. DNB, xix, pp. 589-90; Notes and Queries, eighth series, 12, pp. 183-84, and ninth series, 8, p. 53. 68. For Brodsworth see Girouard, Victorian Country House, pp. 236-42; C. Whitworth, Brodsworth Hall (English Heritage, 1995). Details about the building of Brodsworth and Charles Thellusson's income and expenditure are to be found in Yorkshire Archaeological Society (Leeds), DD 168 (individual documents are not numbered). 69. See pp. 38-39 above.
NOTES TO PAGES
333~343
403
70. L. H. M. Hill, T h e Custances and their Family Circle', Parson Woodforde Society Quarterly Journal, 3 (1970), pp. 4-55. The estate was enclosed in 1825; in 1883 it was 2913 acres. 71. See p. 58 above. The five-by-five bay brick house by Thomas Rawlins probably cost less than £5000 to build. The similarly sized Terling Place, Essex, built in 1771-74 by John Johnson for John Strutt, a well-to-do miller, who had bought the manor of Terling Place and about 850 acres in 1761, cost £5722: the house £4053, the service wing £870 and the stables £809. N. Briggs, John Johnson, IJ32-1814 (Chelmsford, 1991), pp. 20-24. By 1873 the Strutts had built up a very sizeable 8632 acre estate. Bateman, Great Landowners, p. 377, see under Rayleigh. 72. J. Allibone, Anthony Salvin: Pioneer of Gothic Revival Architecture, IJ99-1881 (Cambridge, 1988), p. 159. Salvin's additions to North Runcton for Daniel Gurney in 1833-36 costing £4900 were modest. 73. R. W. Ketton-Cremer, Felbrigg: The Story of a House (London, 1962), pp. 2.67-77. 74. R. G. Wilson, 'Merchants and Land: The Ibbetsons of Leeds and Denton, 1650-1850', Northern History, 24 (1988), pp. 75-100, provides a full set of references. See also C. Hussey, 'Denton Hall, Yorkshire', Country Life, 86, 4 November 1939, pp. 470-74. 75. The old Fairfax house was, according to Ralph Thoresby The Diary of Ralph Thoresby, i (London, 1830), pp. 381, 386, being rebuilt in 1702. It was subsequently much modified by Samuel Ibbetson in the 1730s after the Fairfax's house had burned down. 76. This section on the building activities of Thomas Worsley is based upon Giles Worsley, 'Hovingham Hall, Yorkshire', in Country Life, 188, 15 September 1994, pp. 90-94, and 23 September 1994, pp. 56-60; H. M. Colvin, J. Mordaunt Crook, Kerry Downes and John Newman, The History of the King's Works, v, 1660-17&2 (London, 1976), pp. 76-78,137, 213; L. B. Namier and J. Brooke, The History of Parliament: The House of Commons, 1J54-1J90, iii (London, 1964), pp. 1410-13. Giles Worsley kindly let us see his abstract of Thomas Worsley's accounts in the Worsley papers at Hovingham. 77. Worsley, 'Hovingham', p. 57. 78. Arthur Young, A Six Months Tour through the North of England, ii (London, 1771), p. 88. 79. Namier and Brooke, House of Commons, iii, pp. 1410-13. 80. Quoted in Colvin et al., King's Works, v, p. 76. Worsley had acted as an equerry to George III when he was Prince of Wales. 81. Worsley lost three of his six children in 1769, including his eldest son and heir, when scarlet fever struck the family in London while his wife was lying-in. By 1774 he was suffering from excruciatingly painful attacks of kidney stone. 82. Colvin et al., King's Works, v, p. 74. 83. Worsley, 'Hovingham', pp.56, 93. 84. For a full set of references to the Rolfe papers in the Norfolk RO, upon which this section is based, see R. G. Wilson and A. L. Mackley, 'Founding a Landed Dynasty, Building a Country House: The Rolfes of Heacham in the Eighteenth Century', in Carole Rawcliffe, Roger Virgoe and Richard Wilson, eds, Counties and Communities: Essays on East Anglian History (Norwich, 1996), pp. 307-28. 85. See pp. 11, 77-79, 107-8 above. 86. Norfolk RO, HEA 492, Edmund Rolfe to Edmund Rolfe junior, letter dated 17 June 1811. 87. The Edge papers are deposited in the Nottinghamshire RO; see especially DDE 46/58-59, 46/61-63 and also plans and elevations in DDE 60/1-11. 88. Burke's Landed Gentry, p. 680.
404
NOTES
TO
PAGES
343-349
89. N. Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Nottinghamshire (Harmondsworth, 1979), pp. 391-92. 90. Nottinghamshire RO, DDE 63/5. Edge's landholding in Warwickshire, Staffordshire, Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire is given as 3133 acres in 1801. 'Old rents' had produced £2573 a year, 'raised rents' now returned £3533. In 1805 figures disclose that his income was almost entirely landed, £3551 out of £3823. He was then living entirely within his means, with expenditure of £2902. In 1883 the family owned 2758 acres. 91. Pevsner, Nottinghamshire, p. 392. All but the north front of the house was rendered in the 1790s. 92. Howard Colvin, A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects, 1600-1840 (New Haven and London, 1995) pp. 391-92. 93. Nottinghamshire RO, DDE 46/61. 94. Nottinghamshire RO, DDE 46/59. 95. See note 90 above and Nottinghamshire RO, DDE 14/76/1-2. In 1816 Strelley Hall was insured with the Royal Exchange (policy no. 297676) for £6000: the mansion, £3260; furniture, clothes, plate and books, £1030; glass and china, £100; pictures, prints and drawings, £100; the domestic offices and their contents, the balance. 96. J. M. Robinson, The Wyatts: An Architectural Dynasty (Oxford, 1979), pp. 122-23; Burke's Landed Gentry, pp. 226-27. The Braddylls then retreated to their second estate, Highhead Castle, which was sold in the 1870s. 97. Allibone, Anthony Salvin, pp. 92, 172; Girouard, Victorian Country House, pp. 415, 449. 98. Norman Scarfe (ed.), 'A Frenchman's Year in Suffolk, 1784', Suffolk Records Society, 30 (Woodbridge, 1988), p. 27. 99. Norfolk RO, MC 39/17 and 11217; family papers kindly lent by the late Mrs Rosemary James; Burke's Landed Gentry, p. 1620; John Kenworthy-Browne, Peter Reid, Michael Sayer and David Watkin, Burke's and Savills Guide to Country Houses, iii, East Anglia (London, 1981), p. 115. 100. Baker and Baker, James Brydges; The Victoria History of the Counties of England: A History of Cambridgeshire and the Isle of Ely, vi, ed. A. P. M. Wright (London, 1978), pp. 71-72; J. V. Beckett, The Rise and Fall of the Grenvilles: Dukes of Buckingham and Chandos (Manchester, 1994), pp. 54-57. 101. Howard Colvin, 'Lease or Demolish? The Problem of the Redundant Country House in Georgian England', in Malcolm Airs, The Later Eighteenth-Century Great House (Oxford, 1997), p. 100. See above, pp. 226-28. 102. G. Worsley, Classical Architecture in Britain: The Heroic Age (New Haven and London, 1995), pp. 70, 229; Allibone, Anthony Salvin, pp. 87-90, 190; Girouard, Victorian Country House, pp. 421-22. 103. Colvin et al, King's Works, v, p. 131. 104. Somerset RO, DD/DU 163. 105. Colvin, 'Lease or Demolish?', p. 109. On p. 107, Colvin notes that between 1771 and 1824 at least twenty mansion houses in Norfolk were advertised in the county's newspapers for letting, with shooting being the prime attraction. 106. Norfolk RO, WLS XVIII/7/20, 410 x 8, letter dated 15 August 1831 from Edward Blore to the fourth Baron Walsingham. 107. Cambridge University Library, Add. MSS 3937-38, cash books, and 3955, Edward Blore's account book. 108. West Yorkshire Archives Service, Leeds, Ingleby MS Ace. 2662, letters dated 24 July and 1 October 1798.
NOTES TO PAGES
35O-361
405
109. Colvin, 'Lease or Demolish?', p. 104. 110. Suffolk RO, Bury St Edmunds, HD 1113. 111. Suffolk RO, Ipswich, S. Yoxford, unpublished manuscript; R. T. L. Parr, Yoxford Yesterday, iv, pp. 214-49. 112. In a little over two hundred years, the estates of the Lee, Acton, Fowle, Middleton, and Broke families were united by marriage and descent to the Barons de Saumarez, including the Suffolk seats Bramford Hall, Broke Hall, Livermere Park and Shrubland Park. Suffolk RO, Ipswich, HA93, 'Report on Further Family and Estate Papers of the Saumarez Family, Barons de Saumarez: Thirteenth to Twentieth Century', Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts (London, 1987). 113. Suffolk RO, Ipswich, HA93/3/306 'An Estimate of Expenditure Incurred when Livermere Park is Unoccupied, 31 March 1857'. 114. Suffolk RO, Ipswich, HA93/3/314, letter dated 27 January 1837 from John Chevallier Cobbold (Middleton's solicitor) to Sir William Middleton. 115. Suffolk RO, Ipswich, HA93/3/315, letter dated 20 August 1848 from Lucy Cobbold to Sir William Middleton.
Notes to Chapter 9: Afterword 1. Nicholas Kingsley, The Country Houses of Gloucestershire, ii, 1660-1830 (Chichester, 1992), p. 290. 2. The 'great landowners' were those with more than 3000 acres of land. 3. G. D. H. Cole (ed.), Daniel Defoe, A Tour Thro' the Whole Island of Great Britain, i (London, 1927), pp. 164-70; Scottish RO, GO/18/2107, Clerk of Penicuik, 'Journey to London in 1727'. 4. James Crathorne, Cliveden: The Place and the People (London, 1995). 5. Ibid., p. 98. 6. Ibid., p. ii. 7. David Spring, 'Introduction', in John Bateman, The Great Landowners of Great Britain and Ireland (London, 1883; reprinted Leicester, 1971), pp. 7-22. 8. C. Bruyn Andrews (ed.), The Torrington Diaries, Containing the Tours through England and Wales of the Hon. John Byng (Later Fifth Viscount Torrington) between the Years ij8i and 1794, iii (London, 1936), p. 209. For a full recent discussion, see F. M. L. Thompson, 'English Landed Society in the Twentieth Century', Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, fifth series, 40 (1990), pp. 1-24; sixth series, 1 (1991), pp. 1-20, and 2 (1992), pp. 1-23. 9. Clive Aslet, The Last Country Houses (New Haven and London, 1982), p. 2. 10. Ibid., pp. 2-3. John Martin Robinson, The Latest Country Houses (London, 1983), has also looked at twentieth-century building since the Second World War, defining the country house as 'the capital of a functioning agricultural estate'.
Notes to Appendix: The Chronology of Country House Building 1. N. Pevsner, The Buildings of England (Harmondsworth and London, 1951-98). 2. M. W. Flinn, Origins of the Industrial Revolution (London, 1966), p. 48. 3. Jules Lubbock, The Tyranny of Taste (New Haven and London, 1995), pp. 55-56 and p. 377 n. 54-
406
NOTES TO PAGES
361-363
4. Heather A. Clemenson, English Country Houses and Landed Estates (London, 1982). In John Bateman, The Great Landowners of Great Britain and Ireland (London, 1883; reprinted Leicester, 1971), the term 'Great Landowner' is used for owners of more than 3000 acres worth at least £3000 p.a. but Clemenson reserves it for owners of more than 10,000 acres. 5. Lawrence and Jeanne C. Fawtier Stone, An Open Elite? England, 1540-1880 (Oxford, 1984). 6. Denton Hall (pi. 128) and Henham Hall (pi. 56), rated according to the Stones' criterion in units of 100 square feet, are both 150-unit houses and qualify comfortably as elite houses, but Heacham Hall (pi. 5) of about forty units is below the fifty-unit threshold and would therefore be rejected. 7. See especially reviews by Christopher Clay, 'An Open Elite?', Economic History Review, second series, 38 (1985), pp. 452-54, and R. G. Wilson, 'An Open Elite?', Social History, 11 (1986), pp. 105-8. 8. Stone and Stone, An Open Elite?, p. 385, state that the flurry of building activity lasted until 1770 but their fig. 11.8, p. 384, does not support this conclusion. Building peaked in the 1730s and then declined - with partial recovery in the 1790s - until the 1820s. Building activity rose steadily through the nineteenth century. 9. Ibid., p. 386. 10. Mark Girouard, The Victorian Country House (New Haven and London, 1979), pp. 8-9. Girouard does not say how he compiled his list of houses. It is not referred to as a 'sample'. 11. Jill Franklin, The Gentleman's Country House and its Plan, 1835-1914 (London, 1981), pp. 24-38.
Index Page numbers in italics refer to plates Abdy, Sir John, 4th Bt 81 Abercorn, John James Hamilton, 1st Marquess of 16 Abney Hall, Ches. 231-32 Ackers, George Holland 231 Acton family 405 (n. 112) Adam, Robert 4, 53, 68, 102, 107, 167-69, 375 (n. 72); Audley End 311, 312; Byram Park 21; Gunton Hall 35; Harewood House 167-69, 323, 331; Kedleston Hall 92, 297; Montagu House 101; Newby Hall 68; Wenvoe Castle 41 Adam, William 84 Addison, Joseph 234 advertising 107, 165 Affleck, John 209 agriculture 20, 32-34; depression: 18th c. 27-28, 222, 342; 1873-96 7, 36, 298, 322, 359, 364; farming v. building 162, 165, 166, 181; improvements in 24, 28, 34, 51, 341, 357, 363; pay 166, 173, 175, 385 (n. 103 and 106); prosperity of 20, 39, 315, 321, 343, 354; see also building activity; country houses; financial resources; landownership Aikman, William ii, 84 Ailesbury, Charles, 1st Marquess of 298 Aire and Calder Navigation 41,
335; see also canals; river navigations Aislabie, John 84, 97, 210 Albemarle, George Keppel, 3rd Earl of 37, 367 (n. 12) Albert, Prince Consort 140 Alberti, Leon Battista 114 Albyns, Essex 81 Aldby Park, Yorks. 200 Alderley House, Glos. 216-17 Allason, Thomas 381 (n. 32) Allibone, Jill, Anthony Salvin: Pioneer of Gothic Revival 246 Alnwick Castle, Northumb. 16, 86, 137-38, 161, 171-72 Althorp, Northants. 226, 227 America, see War of American Independence Amesbury Abbey, Wilts. 84 Amhurst, William 179 Amicomi, Giacomo 167 Anglesey, Sir Henry William Paget, 1st Marquess of 60,189 Anne, Queen 335 Antrobus, Gibbs 156-57, 183, 278-79 Apethorpe Hall, Northants. 60 Arbury Hall, War. 277, 279 Arbuthnot, Mrs Harriett 60, 61-62 Arcedeckne, Chaloner 350 Archer, Thomas 59 architects: architect-builders 131-34; architect-contractor associations 140-44; architectural literature, see
literature; clerks of the works 150, 380 (n. 8); craftsmen and 127-28, 169, 177; craftsmen as 57, 116, 118, 119-20, 131-34, 201, 229; duties of 124,136; gentlemen architects 4, 9, 72, 114, 115-16, 355; Office of Works 4, 53, 118-19, 127, 201; professional architects 4, 109, 119-24, 133-34, 156-57, 229, 345-46, 356; professional bodies 119, 124, 133, 136, 359, 378 (n. 82), 381 (n. 32); pupillage system 119; trade card 230; see also building activity; clerks of the works Argyll, Archibald Campbell, 3rd Duke of (Earl of Islay) 105, 375 (n. 8) Arkwright, Sir Richard 293, 315, 399 (n. 100) Arkwright, Richard junior 293, 399 (n. 100) Arlington, Henry Bennet, Earl of 390 (n. 5) Armley House, Yorks. 7-8 Armstrong, Richard 158, 259-60; Haveringland Hall 158, 187-88, 190-91, 383 (n. 57); building statements 158, 163, 250-51; cost savings 158, 164, 382 (n. 38); remuneration 158, 159, 252 artist-craftsmen 48, 166-69, 173, 177, 261, 323, 331; see also
408 individual skills; skilled tradesmen; and workforces Ashbourne monument 373 (n. 50) Ashridge Park, Herts. 61, 62, 63 Askham Richard, Yorks. 371 (n. 19) Aslet, Clive, The Last Country Houses 359 Asprucd, Mario 212 Astley family 34, 39, 367 (n. 12) Atkinson, Peter 244-45, 245-46,245 Atkinson, William 380 (n. 20) Audley End, Essex 83, 308-13, 311,312, 347, 349; see also
Griffin Austen, Jane, Persuasion 28, 29 Austin, Charles 217 Avon Canal, Kennet and 190 Backford Hall, Ches. 142 Bacon family 57, 213 Badeslade, Thomas 220 Bagge family 333; Thomas Bagge 39 Bagutti, Giovanni 168 Baker stonemasons 385 (n. 98) Baldersby Park, Yorks. 269-70; see also Newby Park Ballyscullion, Londonderry
CREATING
PARADISE
Bilborough manor, Notts. 343 Billing Hall, Northants. 214-15 Bingley, Robert Benson, 1st Baron 210 Bingley family 215 Birt, Peter 40-41, 44-45, 335 Blackheath, Kent 104, 105, 280 also landownership; " N e w blacksmiths 162, 252, 389 D o m e s d a y Book" (n. 196) Battoni, P o m p e o Girolamo 13, 78 Bearne, Lewis 161 Blaise Castle, Glos. 214 Bland, Sir John, 7th Bt 200 B e a r w o o d H o u s e , Berks. 63, Barrymore, Lord 56 Bateman, John, The Great Landowners of Great Britain and Ireland 5, 18-19, 21, 219, 361; estate ownership 7, 26, 39, 43, 202, 228, 294, 321; see
138, 246; building cost 138, 139, 241, 267; J o h n W a l t e r and 138,139, 143, 267, 293; Robert Kerr and 138-39, 138,
256, 267 Beauchamp-Proctor family 36, 57, 333-34; Lady 34; Sir William, 7th Bt 35 Beaumont, Sir George 269 Beckford, Alderman William 241, 393 (n. 12)
Beckford, William Thomas
161, 241 Bedale Hall, Yorks. 69 Bedford, Dukes of 18, 59, 298; John Russell, 4th Duke 11, 280; Francis Russell, 5th Duke 18, 95, 226 Beedham, George 155 Belgravia 18 119, 212 Baltic timber 180, 182, 184, 191, Belhus, Essex 2.76-77, 360 Belle Isle, Westmorland 212 192; see also timber bellhanging 175, 182 Banks, Thomas 373 (n. 50) Belton House, Lines. 86 Banqueting House 114 Belvoir Castle, Leics. 60, 81, Barbados 322-23 86, 95, 271 Barbour, Robert 231 Beningborough Hall, Yorks. Barker, Robert 127,166 150, 200 Barnsley Park, Glos. 209 Baron Hill, Anglesey 97-98, 99 Benson (Parnham clerk of the works) 175 baronets 12, 28-31 Barrett-Lennard, Thomas (17th Benyon, Richard 158, 259 Berners family 213 Lord Dacre) 276-77,360 Best, Mary Ellen 82 Barry, Sir Charles 140, 358,358 Bevan, Sylvanus 391 (n. 25) Barry, Edward Middleton 141, Beverley, Yorks. 110-11 267, 268 268, 384 (n. 81)
Blatherwyke Hall, Northants. 129-30,129 Blathwayt, William 209, 229, 302-4,302, 389 (n. 181); for Dyrham matters, see Dyrham Park; his wife Mary (nee Wynter) 303 Blenheim Palace, Oxon. 2, 53, 89-91, 116, 241, 246 Blickling Hall, Norf. 34, 35 Blith, Walter, The English Improver Improved 236
Blois, Sir John, 5th Baronet 350 Blore, Edward 35,137, 231, 249, 268; Buckingham Palace 140, 378-79 (n. 82); Haveringland Hall 158, 159, 163, 249-51, 250, 252, 254, 256; Merton Hall 253,349; Ramsey Abbey 321, 382 (n. 39) Bolesworth Castle, Ches. 231 Bolingbroke, Henry St John, 1st Viscount 234 Bonomi, Joseph 101 Boothby, Sir Brooke 7th Bt 373 (n. 50) Bostock Hall, Ches. 391 (n. 24) Boughton House, Northants. 47, 95-96, 225, 271, 282,392 (n. 43) Bourchier, John 200 Boynton Hall, Yorks. 131 Braddyll, Col. T. R. Gale 241 Bramford Hall, Suff. 405 (n. 112) Bramham Park, Yorks. 84, 86, 210
INDEX Brandeston Hall, Suff. 217 Branthwaite, Miles 240 Brassey, Thomas 218 Bray, William 81 Braybrooke, 1st Baron, see Griffin Brereton Hall, Ches. 231 Brett, Henry 209 Brettingham, Matthew 37, 72, 118, 244; Euston Hall 275, 390 (n. 5); Gunton Park 35, 37; Holkham Hall 35, 37, 72; Langley Park, Norf. 35, 37; Milton House 130, 263 Brettingham, Matthew the younger 278 Bretton Hall, Yorks i n Brewster, John 200 bricklayers 162, 163, 201; pay 159, 171, 173, 174, 175, 238, 396 (n. 58); Haveringland Hall 175, 252, 385 (n. 98) brickmaking 186-89,186, 237, 387-88 (n. 150 and 160); Haveringland Hall 189, 251, 252, 253, 388 (n. 165) bricks 179-80, 388 (n. 166, 174, 175 and 176), 395 (n. 29); movement of 178, 179-80, 181, 182, 189, 388 (n. 166); reused materials 185 Brideshead Revisited 2 Bridgewater, Francis Egerton, 3rd Duke of 18 Bridgewater House, London 61 Brighton Pavilion 60-61, 134 Bristol, Earls of 171, 181, 309, 311; Frederick Augustus Hervey, 4th Earl 72, 119, 212, 213, 288, 350; Frederick William Hervey, 5th Earl 288; see also Audley End; Ickworth Bristol, Elizabeth, Countess of 350 Britain in Pictures series 1 British Tour, 79-100
Broad, Richard 170 Broadlands, Hants. 350 Broadley, Harrison 401 (n. 30) Broadley, Richard 315 Brockfield Hall, Yorks. 245-46, •245
Brocklesby Park, Lines. 188 Brodsworth Hall, Yorks. 185, 218, 330-33,33i, 332, 347, 402 (n. 67); building costs 185, 289, 290, 292, 331, 332; building materials 185-86, 190, 387 (n. 148) Broke, Philip Bowes: Broke Hall, Suff. 213, 279, 405 (n. 112) Brooksbank, Samuel 189 Broomhall, Fife 267 Broughton, Sir Thomas 391 (n. 24) Brown, Lancelot (Capability) 81, 91, 96; Audley End 311; Belhus 277; Dodington Park 325; Harewood House 284, 323; Wrest Park 59, 89; see also landscaping Broxton Hall, Ches. 218 Bryce, David 394 (n. 19) Buccleuch, Dukes of 392 (n. 43); Walter Francis Scott, 5th Duke 18 Buckenham Tofts Hall, Norfolk 40, 41 Buckingham, George Villiers, 1st Duke of 81 Buckingham, George Villiers, 2nd Duke of 300, 301 Buckingham and Chandos, Richard Grenville, 2nd Duke of 26, 298 Buckingham Palace, London 60-61, 134, 140, 378-79 (n. 76 and 82), 379 (n. 7), 388 (n. 170), 390 (n. 198) Buckler, J. C. 35,37, 272 Builder, The 144
409 building activity 161,183; builders 4, 9, 127, 145-46, 147, 293, 353; chronologies 201-32 passim, 355, 359-60, 361-64, 390 (n. 8), 391 (n. 16); contractors 4, 9, 120, 134-36, 140-44, 160, 175, 356; contracts 4, 126-27, 129-32, 136-44, 198, 260; drying out process 195-97; economic impact of 254-55, 356, 357, 395 (n. 29); farming v. building 162, 165, 166, 181; rebuilding 226-32; remodelling v. rebuilding 49, 271-85, 355; roof-raising celebrations 158, 384 (n. 92); siting new houses 54, 72, 178, 282-84, 328, 2)97 (n. 77); technology 169-70, 356; see also architects; country houses; landownership building costs 142, 177, 293, 354, 356; accounts systems 248; competitive tendering 126-27, 135-36; Denton Hall 237-39; estimates 122, 125-26, 136, 146, 257-71, 356, 379 (n. 7); Haveringland Hall 252-53; illustrations of 246, 256, 260, 290, 291, 292, 294; payment methods: by the day 124, 159, 163, 164, 172, 261, 385 (n. 103); "case" and "finish" 261, 263, 270; "cost plus" 131; fixed price contracts ("by the great") 125-26, 135, 136-37, 160, 255, 356; measure and value 124-25, 127, 135, 136, 140, 261; piece-work 159, 163,164,166, 167, 172, 383 (n. 65), 385 (n. 103); see also financial resources; Halfpenny; Kerr; Morris, Robert; Pratt, Sir Roger; Soane
4io building materials 146-47, 159, 165, 177-97, 256, 356; acquisition of 124, 126, 182, 184; movement of, see carriage; reused materials 185-86, 253-54, 259, 275-76; security 146, 181-83, 184; specialised fittings 106-7, 184; see also building activity; building costs; and items indexed separately Building News 219 building tradesmen, see artist-craftsmen; skilled tradesmen; workforces; and individual skills Bulcamp House of Industry, Suff. 126 Bulkeley, Sir Robert Williams, 9th Bt 97-98 Bulkeley Grange, Ches. 218 Bulwer, William Earle 187 Burcham, Henry 107 Burge, Longmire and 185, 331 Burghley House, Northants. 60, 83, 84, 95, 167, 279 Burke's and Savilb Guide to Country Houses 5, 50-51 Burley-on-the-Hill, Rutland 47, 166, 195-96, 299, 300-302, 301, 2,99 (n. 6); building materials 180, 189, 192, 390 (n. 199); see also Nottingham, 2nd Earl of Burlington, Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of 79, 105, IIO-II, 116,
118, 119, 123; Palladianism 72, 92, 105, no, in, 119, 336;
Boynton Hall 131; Chiswick House 104, 105,106, 114; Holkham Hall 72; Kirby Hall IIO-II, 110
Burlington House, London 105 Burn, William 27, 137, 140, 217, 358, 368 (n. 37); Lamport
CREATING PARADISE Hall 141, 175, 370 (n. 9); Lynford Hall 35, 64-65, 217 Burton, Robert, The Anatomy of Melancholy 282 Busiri gouaches 76 Bute, John Stuart, 3rd Earl of 339, 380 (n. 13) Buxton, John 60, 109, 162, 187; Shadwell Lodge (Park) 116, 147-48,170, 283 Buxton, Robert 109 Buxton family 35 Bylaugh Hall, Norf. 36 Byng, Admiral Sir George, 1st Viscount Torrington 95, 220 Byng, George, 4th Viscount Torrington 42, 297 Byng, Admiral John 95 Byng, John, 5th Viscount Torrington 42, 94-95, 94, 297; country house tours 41, 52, 92, 94-96, 225, 226, 240, 2 7i > 397 (n- 71); negative aspects of building 220, 297, 299; on country house decline 100, 225, 226, 228, 271, 346, 359 Byram Park, Yorks. 21, 22 Byres, James 319 Cadogan, Charles Sloane, 2nd Baron 84 Cadogan, Earls of 36, 367 (n. 21); Charles Sloane, 1st Earl 222-23 Caldecott, William 254, 267-68 Calder Navigation, Aire and 41, 335; see also canals; river navigations Camden, Earl 56 Campbell, Colen 86, 93, i n , 375 (n. 8); Houghton Hall 33, 150; Newby Park 211, 243; Vitruvius Britannicus 53, 110, 116-17, 234,307; Wanstead House 53,54
canals 25, 266, 356; investment in 293, 294, 346, 399 (n. 98); movement of materials 178, 179, 180,190,191; see also carriage; river navigations; sea freight Cannon Hall, Yorks. 69 Cannons, Middx. 20, 52,104,348 Canterbury, John Potter, Archbishop of 15 Cantley Hall, Yorks. 60 Cardigan, Earls of 148; James Thomas Brudenell, 7th Earl 141 Carew, Thomas 181, 243-44; see also Crowcombe Court Caribbean 44; see also West Indies Carline, John 378 (n. 76) Carlisle, Charles Howard, 3rd Earl of ii, 29, 47-48, 86, 304-6, 347; for Castle Howard matters, see Castle Howard Carlisle, Henry Howard, 4th Earl of 29, 306 Carlton House, London 134 Carmichael, John Wilson 133 carpenters 162, 163, 165, 166, 167; pay 166, 173, 174, 175, 176, 237, 382 (n. 41); Haveringland Hall 176, 252; Parnham 175, 176, 385 (n. 104) Carr, John 118, 123-24, 177, 200, 314, 349; Byram Park 21; Denton Hall 193, 237, 238, 256,334, 335; Harewood House 215, 323, 331; Heath Hall 215, 215; Kirby Hall i n , 150, 215; Thorp Arch Hall 112, 215, 243
carriage 132, 165, 177-82, 184, 253, 256; animal-drawn vehicles 178-79,181, 182, 253, 388 (n. 166); carriers 178, ij8, 181, 182; rail 100, 163, 166,
INDEX 179-80, 181; waterborne carriage, see canals; river navigations; sea freight; see also building materials; and individual items indexed separately carvers 48, 166-67, U3, 176, 238, 265; see also artist-craftsmen Case, Philip 38-39 Case, Pleasance (Mrs Thomas Bagge) 39 Casentini, Chevalier 331 Cassiobury Park, Herts. 59 Castle Drogo, Devon 161 Castle Howard, Yorks. ii, 48, 82,168, 30J; architects, see Hawksmoor; Robinson, Sir Thomas; Vanbrugh; building of 47, 48-50, 53, 160, 167, 189, 299; clerks of the works 150, 380 (n. 22); cost/funding 243, 246, 288, 304-6, 347; housekeeper guide 82; visitors 47, 48-49, 53, 84, 86, 95, 96; see also Carlisle, Earls of Catherine the Great 25 Catton, Charles 54 Cauldwell, Ralph 32 Cave, Sir Thomas 5th Bt 396 (n. 57) Cavendish, Lady Frederick xvii, 358, 360 Cavendish, Lord John 214-15 Caversham Park, Oxon. 84 Cawood, Jonathan 238 Caygill family 334; Jenny Caygill (Lady Ibbetson) 237, 335 chaldrons 389 (n. 184) Chambers, Andrew 369 (n. 62) Chambers, Sir William 53, 119, 145, 270, 323, 371 (n. 18) Chandos, James Brydges, 1st Duke of 20, 52 Channonz Hall, Norf. 147, 283
411
estate stewards as 148, 149, 380 (n. 20); labour disputes 171; medieval clerks 146, 380 (n. 9 and 10); remuneration 159, 256, 382 (n. 40), 395 (n. 29); responsibility to 152-57; role of 146-47, 152-53, 156-57, i59-6o, 192, 251; see also architects; building activity; workforces (n-9) Cleveland, William Fitzroy 3rd Cheshire 6, 204-21 passim, Duke of 350 227-32 passim Cheshire Country Houses 231 Clive, Robert Clive, Baron 28 Cheveley Park, Cambs. 226 Cliveden House, Bucks, xviii, Childerley Hall, Cambs. 226 357-58,358, 360 chimney-pieces 107, 177, 182, Clumber Park, Notts. 95 185, 238, 326; Wolterton coal 34, 40, 182, 188-89, 2.31, Hall 173, 174, 174 335, 388 (n. 165), 389 (n. 184) Chippendale, Thomas 238, 323, Cobbett, William 94, 95 Cockerell, Col. John 229 33i Cockerell, Samuel Pepys 119 Chippenham Park 226 Cockfield Hall, Suff. 350 Chiswick House, Middx. 104, Cockley Cley, Norf. 217 105,106, 114; see also Cocks, Sir Richard 209 Burlington Codrington, Christopher Chute, John 247 324-27, 402 (n. 51); see also Civil War 52, 226; see also Dodington Park Cromwell; Interregnum Codrington, Sir William 2nd Clarendon House, London 101, 115 Bt 3 25 Clarke, George 164 Coke, see Leicester, Earls of Claughton Manor, Lanes. 232 Cole Green Park, Herts. 243 Claydon House, Bucks. 22-24, Cole Orton Hall, Leics. 269 23, 24, 29 Colesbourne Park, Glos. 216 Clemenson, Heather A., Coleshill House, Berks. 96, 115 English Country Houses and Collett, John 153 Landed Estates 361-62 Collingwood, Henry 133 Clements, John 254 Colquhoun, Patrick 39, 293 clergy 5, 12, 39, 82, 86, 199, Combermere, Viscount 231 244-45, 260; see also Commission of Military Lyttelton, Charles; Warner; Inquiry (1806-1807) 135-36 Woodforde Complete Peerage, The 14-15 Clerk, Sir John of Penicuik 53, "composition" 389 (n. 185) 83-84,105-6, 108, 357 Congham Hall, Norf. 217 clerks of the works 127, Conishead Priory, Lanes. 241, 146-60, 151, 356; architectural 348 experience 150, 380 (n. 8); connoisseurs 67, 70
Charles 1115, 226 Charles II 20, 81, 114, 308, 349 Charlotte Sophia, Queen 373 (n. 50) Chatsworth House, Derby. 18, 47, 53, 102, 116, 167, 195; visitors 53, 81, 89, 95, 96; see also Devonshire, Dukes of Chaucer, Geoffrey 146, 380
412
conspicuous consumption 228, 236-40, 354, 357; "mausoleums of vanity" 297 Conway, Lord 116, 209 Copland, Alexander 135 Cornwallis, Lord 383 (n. 66) Corsham Court, Wilts. 82 Cort, Hendrik de 48 Cosby, Gen. Sir Henry 229 Costessey Hall, Norf. 35,37 costs, see building costs country houses: country seat v. house in the country 8, 202, 356, 364; definitions of 4, 5-9, 6, 293, 365-66 (n. 12 and 13); demolished houses 5, 95, 225-28, 348, 359; dynastic ambition 19, 22, 25, 28, 49, 228; emulation and rivalry 92, 239, 240; for entertainment 8, 51, 54-63, 357; hunting 45, 57-58; letting of houses 349-51, 359, 398 (n. 95), 404 (n. 105); recreation and sport 8, 22, 218, 225, 228, 248, 356, 357; shooting 32, 45, 57, 63, 342, 404 (n. 105); symbols of power and wealth 49-51, 63, 240, 354; see also building
activity; landownership; visitors Country Life 1
Court of Hill, Shrops. 56 Courteenhall Hall, Northants. 215
Cowper, William Cowper, ist Earl 243 Crace, J. G. & Son 232; John Crace 169-70, 267-68, 384 (n. 81) craftsmen, see artist-craftsmen; skilled tradesmen; and individual skills Cranmer Hall, Norf. 209 Creevey, Thomas 59-60, 62, 86
CREATING
PARADISE
Crewe Hall, Ches. (Lord Crewe) 140-41,169-70, 267-68, 268, 279, 384 (n. 81) Croker, John Wilson 60 Cromer Hall, Norf. 38 Cromwell, Oliver 226; see also Civil War; Interregnum Cromwell family 249 Crossley, Francis, later ist Bt 219 Crowcombe Court, Som. 173, 174,181,187, 243-44, 244, 246 Crowfield Hall, Suff. 227-28 Crunden, John 270 Cubitt, Thomas 135,140,140, 160,184,196-97, 378-79 (n. 82) Cubitt, William & Co. 140-41, 169-70, 268, 384 (n. 81) Cubitt family (Sloley/Honing) 39, 40 Cuitt, George 31, 93 Culford Hall, Suff. 36,383 (n. 66) Cullum, Sir Thomas 145 Cunningham, John 142 Custance, John 57-58, 83, 333-34 Cusworth Hall, Yorks. 189, 256, 263, 264-65, 26$, 266, 371 (n. 19); building costs 256, 257, 263, 264-65, 290, 292; Wrightson and 148, 264, 265, 269 Dacre, Lord, see Barrett-Lennard, Thomas Dahl, Michael 302 Dalham Hall, Suff. 208-9 Dallington Hall, Northants. 391 (n. 16)
Dance, George 118 Dance, George the younger 119 121, 259, 269
Darcy, Frederica (Countess of Holderness) 283 Dashwood, Sir Francis 2nd Bt 69, 70
Dashwood, Sir John 3rd Bt 373 (n. 49)
Davers, Sir Robert, 5th Bt 350 Davidson, John 193 Davis, John 188 Davy, David Elisha 227-28, 374 (n. 64) Davy, Eleazar 319 Dawber, E. Guy 359 Dawes, Lady 113 Daylesford House, Glos. 229 De Carle, John and Benjamin 180, 383 (n. 66) de Grey, see Walsingham decoration 195-97, 232, 254, 375 (n. 72); artist-craftsmen 48, 166-67, 169; see also Adam, Robert; painters Deene Park, Northants. 141, 148 Defoe, Daniel 8, 45, 81,104, 105, 357 Delamere House, Ches. 391 (n.24) Delbury House, Shrops. 132 Denison, Joseph 315, 401 (n. 30) Denison, William 170, 219 Denton Hall, Yorks 237, 238, 334-36,334, 37i (n. 19), 403 (n. 73), 406 (n. 6); building costs 193, 237-39, 256, 290, 292; insurance 287, 288; John Carr and 193, 237, 238, 256,334, 335 Derby, Earls of 62, 231 Derby House, London 101 Derwent Water 80
Desgodetz, Antoine, Les edifices antiques de Rome 234 Devall, John 169 Devonshire, Dukes of 53,105, 116,167, 214; William Cavendish, 5th Duke 18,102; William Spencer Cavendish, 6th Duke 26,195, 298; see also Chatsworth House Devonshire House, London 102,102
Didlington Hall, Norf. 36, 179
INDEX Dilettanti, Society of 68-70, 69, Dyrham Park, Glos. 127-29,128, 176,193,198, 209, 299, 303-4, 268; see also Grand Tour 348; building materials 181, Dingley Hall, Northants. 2oy 184, 189, 193, 388 (n. 176); Directories 5, 6 Charles Watkins and 149, Disraeli, Benjamin, 1st Earl of 170, 181; discipline 158, 170, Beaconsfield 44 384 (n. 85); joiners 124, 127, Dissolution of Monasteries 362 166, 170; masons 165, 170, Ditchingham Hall, Norf. 39 Dobson, John 133-34, m, ?>45-A6 176, 184; pay 124, 166, 170, 173; timber 179,180, 192; Docking Hall, Norf. 217 workforce 127-28, 148-49, Doddington Hall, Ches. 391 176; see also Blathwayt, (n.24) William Dodgon, John 238 Dodgson, Thomas 238 Dodington, George Bubb Eames, William 325 (Lord Melcombe) 70 Earsham Hall, Norf. 147 Dodington Park, Glos. 324-27, East Carlton Hall, Northants. 325, 348, 376 (n. 38), 388 164-65,164,166,174, 214, 215, (n. 176), 402 (n. 51) 395 (n. 30) Donington Hall, Leics. 280, East Indies 44, 322 281, 397 (n. 71) East Riding Bank 315 Donn, William 263 Eastbury Park, Dorset 348 Donthorn, W. J. 37-38 Eastnor Castle, Herefs. 241 Down Hall, Essex 237 Easton Neston, Northants. 227 Downton Castle, Herefs. 97 Eaton, Daniel 148 drapers 107 Eaton Hall, Ches. 11, 12, 12, 63, Drayton House, Northants 92 241, 246; see also Dublin Exhibition 331 Westminster, Duke of Duckworth, George 329 Eaton-by-Congleton Hall, Duckworth, Samuel 329 Ches. 156-57, IJJ, 183, 278-79 Duckworth, William 141, 143, Ebbisham, Surrey 188 328-30,328, 349, 402 (n. 65); Edge, Ralph 343 see also Orchardleigh Park Edge, Thomas Webb 132, 183, Dumbleton Hall, Glos. 209 269, 343-45, 404 (n. 90); see Duncombe, Thomas also Strelley Hall (Duncombe Park) 200 Edward III 146 Dundas family 78 Edward, Prince of Wales Dungeness lighthouse 308 (Edward VII) 63, 217 Dunham Massey Hall, Ches. 95 Edwards, Thomas 278 Dunninald House, Angus 263 Egerton, Sir John 8th Bt 381 Dunrobin Castle, Sutherland 61 (n. 32), 382 (n. 41) Dunster Castle, Som. 141 Egerton, Sir Philip de Grey Dunston Hall, Norf. 217 10th Bt 218 Dupplin Castle, Perths. 86 Egerton, William 391 (n. 24) Durrant family 27, 57; Davy Egremont, Sir George O'Brien Durrant 27-28 Wyndham, 3rd Earl of 18, 214
413 Elgin, Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of 267 Elliot, Sir Walter Bt (Austen character) 28, 29 Elmham (North) Hall, Norf. 38 Elveden Hall, Suff. 36, 63, 213 Englefield House, Berks. 158, 259-60 Escrick Park, Yorks. 69 Eshton Hall, Yorks. 152,152, 171,194, 256, 289-90, 347, 371 (n. 19); building materials 180,190, 191,194, 256, 386 (n. 120), 388 (n. 174) Estcourt, Thomas: Estcourt Park, Glos. 214 estimates, see building costs Etty, John 380 (n. 22) Etty, William 150, 380 (n. 22) Euston Hall, Suff. 199, 275, 390 (n.5) Evans, George Freke 153 Evelyn, John 303 Everingham Hall, Yorks. 171 excise duties, see taxation Exeter, John Cecil, 5th Earl of 167 Extraordinary Red Book 20 Eyford Park, Glos. 216 Fairfax family 45, 200, 335, 403 (n. 75) Fairs, Thomas 197, 254 Faram, John 142 Farington, Joseph 120, 240 farmhouses 226, 227, 260 farriers 162 Fawley Court, Bucks. 56, 239 Fawsley Hall, Northants. 227 Feetham, W. H. 389-90 (n. 198) Felbrigg Hall, Norf. 34, 70, 73, 75-77, 75-77, I 2 ° , 272, 334 Fellowes, Edward 249, 251, 253, 254, 320-21, 322, 382 (n. 39); see also Haveringland Hall Fellowes, Sir John 233 Fellowes, Robert 233-36,
414 263-64, 342; see also Shotesham Park Fellowes, William junior 233-34 Fellowes, William senior 233 Felthorpe Hall, Norf. 251 Felton, John 81 Fermor-Hesketh family 227 Fetcham Park, Surrey 369 (n. 64) Fiennes, Celia 8, 81 financial resources of landowners: borrowing 25, 270, 278, 297-98, 354, 355; borrowing on 26, 278; debt 22-24, 2.5-26, 271, 297-98, 348, 354, 359; examples: Blathwayt 302-4; Carlisle 304-6, 347; Codrington 324-27; Duckworth 328-30; Edge 343-45; Fellowes 320-21, 322; Griffin 308-13, 347, 400 (n. 24); Ibbetson 2.37, 334-36; Lascelles 322-24, 324-25, 327; Leicester 306-8, 347; Nottingham 300-302; Rolfe 340-43; Rous 319-20, 321-22; Sykes 313-19, 322, 401 (n. 31); Thellusson 330-33; Worsley 336-40, 347; gambling 22, 306, 341, 350; houses built from non-landed income 36, 61, 63, 322-36; income 7, 12, 18, 239, 270, 298; inheritance 237, 239, 270, 355; marriage settlements 19, 28, 44, 100, 237, 239, 270, 346, 355; mineral rights 20, 25, 28, 346, 355; mortgages 19, 26, 28, 297, 298; non-landed sources 7, 20-22, 228, 247-48, 294-95, 346, 355; proceeds of office 20, 28, 44, 229, 237, 346, 355; rental income 7, 20, 36, 222-24, 228, 247-48, 294, 345-59
CREATING
PARADISE
passim, 395 (n. 33); settlement /entail 19, 25, 28, 278, 297; see also agriculture; building activity; building costs; landownership Finch, see Nottingham, Earls of fire hazard 286-89, 348-49 Firebrace, Sir Charles 2nd Bt 287 Firth, James 171 Fitzgerald ("Fighting Fitzgerald") 350 Fitzwalter, Benjamin Mildmay, 1st Earl 16-17, 2,83 Fitzwilliam, Charles William Wentworth, 5th Earl 298, 368 (n. 33) Fitzwilliam, William Wentworth, 1st Earl 148, 179 Fitzwilliam, William Wentworth, 3rd Earl 130 Flanders oak 191, 192 Flinn, Michael W., Origins of the Industrial Revolution 361 Flitcroft, Henry 72, 118, 130, 200, 280 Folkes, Sir Martin 1st Bt 342 Fonthill Abbey, Wilts. 160-61, 239, 241, 241, 393 (n. 12) Fonthill Splendens, Wilts. 241, 393 (n. 12) Foremark Hall, Derby. 132 Fornham St Genevieve Hall, Suff. 120, 213-14 Fosque, Elizabeth 176 Foston, Yorks. 244-45 Fountaine, Sir Andrew 86, 372-73 (n. 37) Fowle family 405 (n. 112) Fox family 20, 78 Franklin, Jill, The Gentleman's Country House and its Plan, 1835-1914 246, 363-64 Freek, Jonathan 181 Freeman, Mr (Kerr's surveyor) 139, 267 Freeman family 56
Fremantle, Sir Thomas 1st Bt and 1st Baron Cottesloe 146, 180 French artist-craftsmen 166-67 French Revolution 19 French wars 18, 19, 100; effects on: agriculture 20, 39, 343, 363; financial opportunities 299, 335; glass supplies 194; Grand Tour 79, 99; house building 205, 247, 355, 363; military building 134; rental income 223, 224; scarcity of labour 159,165 Frewer, William 178 furnishings 106-7, 182, 184, 197, 294; Denton Hall 238-39 furze (gorse) 181 Fust, Sir Francis 5th Bt 352, 353 Gage family 348 gambling 22, 306, 341, 350 gamekeepers 371 (n. 19) Garboldisham Manor, Norf. 348 gardeners 176, 195, 350-51 gardens (kitchen) 58, 186, 282 Gardner, Thomas 132, 183, 269, 344,344, 345
Garforth, William 371 (n. 19) Garrard, Thomas 42 Garrett, Daniel 72, 281 Garrick, David 74 gas installations 43, 195, 326 Gass bricklayers 385 (n. 98) Gawthorp Hall, Yorks. 283, 284 Gentleman's Magazine 314 George 114 George II14 George III 60, 169, 339 George, Prince Regent (George IV) 42, 60-61,104, 134, 378 (n. 76) Gerbier, Sir Balthazar, A Brief Discourse ... Principles of Magnificent Building 124, 145, 187
415
INDEX
Great Moreton Hall, Ches. 231 Great North Road 86 Great Northern Railway 329 Great Witchingham Hall, 270 Norf. 36 Gilling Castle, Yorks. 200 Greece 70 Girle, Caroline, see Lybbe Green, Edward 217 Powys Greenwich Hospital 167 Girouard, Mark, The Victorian Gregory, Gregory 137 Country House 43, 363 Greville, Charles Cavendish glass 182, 184, 193-95,194, 252> Fulke 60 389 (n. 190); reused Grey, Amabel, Countess de materials 185 396 (n. 55) glaziers 162, 163,184, 193-94, 252 Glegg, Capt. Edward Holt 142 Grey, Jemima, Marchioness 58-59, 88, 104, 396 (n. 55); see Glentworth Hall, Lines. 95 Glevering Hall, Suff. 350 also Wrest Park; Yorke, Gloucestershire 204-21 passim, Philip Grey, Thomas Philip, 2nd Earl 228-31 Goddard, Dr (Gossip's de 140, 378-79 (n. 82); for Wrest, see Wrest Park physician) 113 Griffin, Sir John Griffin, 1st Goldsmid, Sir Francis, 2nd Bt 216 Baron Braybrooke 308-13, 309, 347, 400 (n. 24 and 25); Gomersal, Yorks. 335 Goodwood House, Sussex 281 see also Audley End Gordale Scar, Yorks. 97 Grimsthorpe Castle, Lines. 95, Gossip, William, see Thorp 271 Grimston, Thomas 109, i n , Arch Hall 160, 375 (n. 8) Gott, Benjamin 7-8 Grittleton, Wilts. 42-43 Gott, Joseph 8 Grosvenor family 61; see also Gould, James 118 Eaton Hall; Westminster, Gower, see Sutherland Duke of Grafton, Dukes of 20; Charles Fitzroy, 2nd Duke 199, 275, Gunn, Revd William 39 Gunnersbury House, Middx. 390 (n. 5) 104 Grafton (Wakefield Lodge) 227 Gunthorpe Hall, Norf. 257 Graham, Joshua 107 Gunton Park, Norf. 35, 37 Grand Tour xv, 63-79, 67, 83, Gurdon family 37, 391 (n. 25) 99, 372. (n. 33); impact of 9, Gurney family 334; John 72, 95, 355, 372 (n. 33), 372-73 Gurney 217 (n. 37); Society of Dilettanti 68-70, 69, 268; "tourists" 66, Guybon, Francis 148, 179 68; see also Palladio; visitors Grantham, Thomas Robinson, Hackforth, Yorks. 97 2nd Baron 269-70 Hagley Hall, Worcs. 89, 90, 95, Granton Harbour, Edinburgh 18 247 Great Eastern Railway 180 Hake will, Henry 370 (n. 9) Germany 66 Gibbs, James 33, 105, 116, 278; Book of Architecture 117, 200,
Hakewill, John Henry 217 Hale, Robert Blagden 216-17 Halfpenny, William 233, 242, 243, 286, 289, 328
Halifax, George Montagu, 2nd Earl of 281 Hamilton, John 107 Hamilton, Sir William 69 Hampton Court, Middx. 47, 105, 127-28, 167
Hanbury-Tracy, see Sudeley Hannen, Holland and, see Holland and Hannen Harbord, Sir William 35 Harborough, Earls of 274, 396 (n.57) Harcourt, Simon, Viscount 70 Hardwick, Philip 216 Hardwick Hall, Oxon. 56 Hardwick House, Suff. 145 Hardwicke, Philip Yorke, 1st Earl of 88; see also Yorke, Philip 2nd Earl Hare, Augustus 63 Hare, Sir Thomas 30, 217, 391 (n. 25) Harewood, Lord, see Lascelles, Edwin Harewood House, Yorks. 243, 283-84,284, 322-24, 324-25, 327, 371 (n. 19), 380 (n. 20);
building materials 180, 190, 192; John Carr and 215, 323, 331; specialist skills 167-69, 284, 323, 331; visitors 97, 323-24; see also Lascelles, Edwin Harlaxton Manor, Lines. 137 Harrington, Earl of 231 Harrowby, Dudley Ryder, 2nd Earl of 140 Harvey, John 176 Hastings, Warren 229 Hatfield House, Herts. 79, 83, 271 Hauduroy, Samuel 127,128, 303, 304
4i6 Haveringland Hall, Norf. 250, 255, 320-21, 347, 383 (n. 57); architect, see Blore, Edward; bricks 187-88, 189, 251, 252, 253, 388 (n. 165); building costs 197, 249-55, 256, 257, 290, 292, 395 (n. 29); building materials 180,
190-91, 251, 252-54, 256; clerk of the works, see Armstrong, Richard; contractors 141, 197, 254; pay 158, 175, 176, 252, 256, 257, 382 (n. 39), 385 (n. 98); timber 192, 251, 252; workforce 162-63, 164, 165-66, 188, 197, 250-51; see also Fellowes, Edward Hawke, Edward Henry Julius Hawke, 6th Baron 367 (n. 21) Hawkins, Philip 277-78 Hawksmoor, Nicholas 47, 48, 48-49,167,305,306,380 (n. 22) Hay, Charles 150, 159 Hayman, Francis 265 Hazells, The, Beds. 95 Heacham Hall, Norf. 11, 12, 14, 40, 78-79, 340-43, 347, 406 (n. 6); building costs 107, 256, 289-90, 290, 341; building materials 180-81, 185, 192-93, 256; furniture and fittings 107; workforce ^ o , l59, 256; see also Rolfe, Edmund Heath Hall, Yorks. 69, 78, 215,215 heating systems 288-89 Hemsted House, Kent 171 Henderskelfe Castle, Yorks. 48 Hengrave Hall, Suff. 348 Henham Hall, Suff. 122, 347, 406 (n. 6); architect, see Wyatt, James; blacksmiths 195, 389 (n. 196); bricklayers 159, 174; brickmaking 188; building costs 122, 158, 256,
CREATING
PARADISE
290, 292, 320; building materials 181, 182, 183, 193, 256, 388 (n. 175), 389 (n. 185 and 196); building works 126-27, 185, 224, 319-20; clerk of the works, see Marsden, Rufus; decorating materials 182,197; glass 182, 193-94, 389 (n. 190); insurance 287, 288; joiners 159, 174, 384 (n. 94); lime 182, 193; pay 159, 169, 172, 174, 175, 256, 384 (n. 94); plumbers 193; reused materials 185; servants 197, 371 (n. 19); stone 182, 190, 388 (n. 175); timber 180, 182, 192; women 176; workforce 163-64,165-66, 251; see also Rous, Sir John Herbert, Lord Henry, see Pembroke, 9th Earl of Hereford, Robert Devereux, 16th Viscount 18 Hertford, Earl of 105 Hertford, Francis Charles Seymour-Conway, 3rd Marquess of 60 Hervey peers, see Bristol, Earls Hervey, William 120-21 Heveningham Hall, Suff. 81, 120, 213, 213, 214, 281-82; see
also Vanneck, Sir Gerard Hewitt, John 350 Heydon 187 Heythrop House, Oxon. 81-82, 373 (n. 49) High House, Campsea Ashe, Suff. 217 High Legh Hall, Ches. 391 (n. 24) Highmore, Joseph 149 Hilborough Hall, Norf. 32 Hill Court, Glos. 352, 353 Hill family 192 Hillington Hall, Norf. 38
Hinton, Lord 165 Hiorne, David 132 Hiorne, William 132, 261 Historical Monuments of England, Royal Commission on (RCHME) 203, 222
Hoare, Benjamin 40 Hoare, Henry 98 Hoare, Sir Richard 40 Hoare, Sir Richard Colt, 1st Bt 97-98, 98, 323, 370 (n. 66) Hobart, Dr Thomas 70 Hoffman kiln 186 Holderness, 5th Earl of 283 Holford, R. S. 216-17 Holkham Hall, Norf. 50, 73, 74, 306-8; building of 32, 35, 37, 71-72, 167, 243, 269, 308; brickmaking 187, 188; kitchen installations 196, 389-90 (n. 198); visitors 34, 47, 59, 89, 96, 198, 199, 390 (n. 4); see also Leicester, Earls of Holland, Henry 41, 42, 119, 153, 226, 397 (n. 67) Holland and Hannen, Messrs 141, 143, 175-76, 190, 385 (n. 109) Home House, London 101 Honing Hall, Norf. 38, 39, 40, 243, 369 (n. 62) Honingham Hall, Norf. 36, 240 Hooton Hall, Ches. 391 (n. 24) Hope, Henrietta Adela (Countess of Lincoln) 22 Hope, Henry Thomas 22 Hopetoun House, West Lothian 198 Hornby Castle, Yorks. 86 Horseheath Hall, Cambs. 115, 226, 227, 348; see also Pratt, Sir Roger Horton House, Northants. 280-81
417
INDEX hot-air heating 43, 142 hot-houses 58 Hotham, Sir Charles 5th Bt i n Houghton Hall, Norf. 2, 22, 25,33, 109, in, 390 (n. 5); building of 34, 149-50, 167, 190, 209, 282-83, 383 (n. 66); visitors 34, 59, 75, 87-88, 89, 109, 111; see also Walpole, Sir Robert Houseman, J. A., A Topographical Description of... West Riding of Yorkshire 8 Hoveton Hall, Norf. 39 Hovingham Hall, Yorks. 147, 189, 269, 336-40,337, 371 (n. 19); see also Worsley, Thomas Howard de Walden barony 313; Frederick George Ellis, 7th Baron 367 (n. 21); see also Griffin; Suffolk, Earls of Howard, John 231 Howe, Harriet Georgiana, Countess 60 Howe, Richard William Penn Curzon, 1st Earl 60 Huddersfield, Yorks. 22 Hughes, John 382 (n. 39) Hume, David 234 Humphry, Ozias 94 Hunter, Alexander 124, 170 Huntingdon, Selina Hastings, Countess of 280 Hussey, Christopher 42 Ibbetson, Sir Henry, 1st Bt 335 Ibbetson, Sir James, 2nd Bt 237, 334-36; for Denton matters, see Denton Hall Ibbetson, James senior 335 Ibbetson, Lady 237, 335 Ibbetson, Samuel 403 (n. 75) Ickworth, Suff. 120, 171,181, 212, 288, 383 (n. 66);
4th Earl of Bristol and 119, 212, 213, 288
Ince, Thomas 383 (n. 65) Ingleby, John 188, 350 inland waterways, see canals; river navigations Institute of British Architects 136, 359, 378 (n. 82) insurance 286-89, 348-49 interior decoration, see artist-craftsmen; decoration; painters Interregnum 115, 362; see also Civil War; Cromwell Inveraray Castle, Argyll 375 (n. 8) Ionia 70 Ireson, Nathaniel 244, 244 Irish peers 15, 18, 19 ironmongery 182, 195, 238, 252, 389 (n. 196) Irwin, 7th Viscount and Lady 16,17, 288 Isham family 370 (n. 9); Sir Charles E. Isham, 10th Bt 141, 385 (n. 109); Sir Justinian Isham, 2nd Bt 115, 131-32; see also Lamport Hall Islay, Lord, see Argyll Italy 66, 67, 6y, 68, 69, 70; see also artist-craftsmen; Grand Tour Iveagh, Edward Cecil Guinness, 1st Earl of 36, 63 Ivory family 35
238; Henham Hall 159, 174, 384 (n. 94) Jones, Mr (Langley Park, Bucks.) 56 Jones, Inigo 72, 114, 115, 117, 226, 280; John Webb and 115, 119; Lord Burlington and 105, no Jones, Samuel 331 Jonson, Ben (jamin), To Penshurst 52 Journals of Visits to Country Seats 89 Joynes, Henry 118 Kauffmann, Angelika 169, 323 Kay, Joseph 381 (n. 32) Keck, Anthony 229 Kedleston Hall, Derby. 89, 92, 93, 96, 97, 150, 243, 297 Kelham Hall, Notts. 194,194 Kelly's 1892 directory 6 Ken Hill, Norf. 217 Kenilworth Castle, War. 79 Kennet and Avon Canal 190 Kensington Palace, London 47, 128, 273, 300
Kent, Sir Charles 120, 213-14 Kent, Henry Grey, Duke of 88, 284; see also Grey, Marchioness; Wrest Park Kent, Nathaniel 186 Kent, William 35, 71, 72, 92, 116, 123, 167; Designs of Inigo Jones 117; Raynham Hall 34, Jackaman, L. 181 87, 87. 3i3 Jackson, Sir William 232 Keppel, Augustus Keppel, 1st Jarrett, Edward 70 Viscount 213 Jekyll, Joseph 391 (n. 16) Kerr, Robert 138-39,138, 256, Jodrell, Richard Paul 369 (n. 62) 267; The Gentleman's House Johnson, John 118, 257, 259, 139, 273, 279-80, 395 (n. 33); 268, 403 (n. 71); see also East on building costs 233, 259, Carlton Hall 260, 266-67, 2.70, 279-94 Johnson, Dr Samuel 297 passim, 395 (n. 33); joiners 4, 162, 163, 166,167, 197; Toddington Manor 378 pay 159, 166, 171, 173, 175, (n. 78)
4i8 Keswick Hall, Norf. 334 Ketton, John 334 Ketton, Robert 179 Kilmorey, Earl of 231 Kilnwick Hall, Yorks. i n , 160 Kimberley Hall, Norf. 34, 176, 191, 256, 388 (n. 176) Kimbolton Castle, Hunts. 53, 167, 282 King, Gregory 5, 12-13, 14, 27, 3i,39 King's Lynn portraits 86 King's Weston, Glos. 209, 303 Kingsthorpe Hall, Northants. 395 (n. 30) Kingston Lacey, Dorset 115 Kinnoull, Abigail, Countess of 86 Kip, John 128 Kipling, Rudyard, "A Truthful Song" 145 Kippax Park, Yorks. 200 Kippes, T. 176 Kirby Hall, Yorks. 109, 110-12, 110, 150, 160, 215, 375 (n. 8); see also Thompson, Stephen kitchen gardens 58, 186, 282 kitchen installations 162, 182, 184, 195, 196, 389-90 (n. 198) Kiveton House, Yorks. 47, 209-10 Knight, Richard Payne 97 Knightley family 227 knights 12, 31-32 Knowsley Hall, Lanes. 62 La Rochefoucauld, brothers de 81, 177, 282 labourers 162,163, 173,174, 175, 177,181,187, 384 (n. 85); see also workforces Laguerre, Louis 167 Laing, David 127 Lake District 80, 82, 83, 108 Lambton Castle, Dur. 60 Lambton family 61
CREATING
PARADISE
Lami, Eugene 103 Lamport Hall, Northants. 115, 131-32, 141, 175-76, 190, 370 (n. 9), 385 (n. 109) Lancaster House, London, see Stafford House Lancroon, Gerard 304 landownership 9, 12, 204, 353-55, 358-59; estate size 7, 202, 228-32, 353, 354, 356, 391 (n. 17 and 23); gentry 26-32; growth 19, 43-44, 354; newcomers 43-46; peerage 17-26; tables showing 204, 208, 209, 210, 216, 294
Lascelles, Henry 322-23, 324 Lawrence, Sir Thomas 123 Laxton Hall, Northants. 153, 159 lead 182, 193, 238, 252, 388 (n. 176) Leadbetter, Stiff 55, 371 (n. 20) Lee, Richard 380 (n. 10) Lee, Thomas 156 Lee family 405 (n. 112) Leeds, Thomas Osborne, Duke of 209-10
Leeds and Liverpool Canal 180, 191 Leeds Intelligencer 23J
Legh, Henry Cornwallis 391 (n. 24) landlords 9, 96,148, 225, 231; legislation: Act of Union 362; enclosure 20, 28, 32, 39, 94, Corn Laws 44; Estcourt's 319; tenant farmers 9, 20, Act 214; "Thellusson Act" 24-25, 359, 360; see also 402 (n. 67); Third Reform agriculture; Bateman; Act 359; building activity; country Leicester, Sir Thomas Coke houses; financial resources; (1697-1759), 1st Earl of 4, 71, "New Domesday Book"; 306-8, 347, 367 (n. 12), 390 landscaping 22, 92, 282-83, 325; (n. 4); design work 72, 244; see also Brown Fountaine 373 (n. 37); Four Landsdell, John 192 Books subscriber 118; Langley, Batty 270; The Holkham matters, see Builder's Jewel 118; The Holkham Hall; Grand Tour London Prices of Bricklayers' 70-71; son, Viscount Materials and Works 234 Edward Coke 307; Walpole Langley Park, Bucks. 5, 56,57, and 34; widow Margaret 308 371 (n. 20) Leicester, Thomas William Coke (1752-1842), 1st Earl Langley Park, Norf. 35, 36, 37, 2nd creation 24-25, 32, 341, 189, 333-34, 403 (n. 71) 367 (n. 12); see also Holkham Langworth, John 197, 390 Hall (n. 202) Leigh, Lords 261 Lapworth furnishings 331,332 Leoni, Giacomo 283; Palladio's Lascelles, Edward (Edwin's Four Books 117, 118, 376 (n. 15) nephew) 324 Letton Hall, Norf. 37, 391 (n. 25) Lascelles, Edward (Henry's Levens, Westmorland 166 brother) 322-23 Lightfoot, Luke 24 Lascelles, Edwin (Lord Lightoler, Timothy 261 Harewood) 68, 293, 323-24, Lilburn Tower, Northumb. 133 323, 324-25, 327, 33i, 333; see Lilleshall Hall, Shrops. 61 also Harewood House
Land Question; absentee
419
INDEX lime 182, 186, 192-93, 238, 252, 389 (n. 184) limestone 203, 387 (n. 148) Lincoln, Henrietta Adela, Countess of 22 Lincoln, Henry Pelham Alexander Pelham, Earl of 22; see also Newcastle, Dukes of literature 1-3, 5, 6, 19, 50-51; architecture 53, 104, 114, 116-18, 178, 200, 259, 270; Grand Tour 67-68, 70; Palladio's Four Books, see Leoni; Palladio; Ware; travel guides 79-80, So, 82, 96; see also Grand Tour; visitors litigation 130-31, 153, 156 Livermere Park, Suff. 350-51, 405 (n. 112) Liverpool Canal, Leeds and 180, 191 Liverpool Custom House 149 Locke, John 234 Loder family 218 Londesborough Hall, Yorks. i n Londesborough, Barons 401 (n. 30); Albert Denison, 1st Baron 44 London 100-108 London Architects' Club 119, 124, 381 (n. 32) London Chronicle 102
London Custom House 127, i49 London Institution 135 Londonderry family 61 Long Melford Hall, Suff. 287 Longleat, Wilts. 79, 83, 89, 279 Longmire and Burge 185, 331 Lonsdale, Countess of 60 Lonsdale, Earls of 61; James Lowther, Earl of 184; see also Lowther family Lorrain, Claude 97, 355
Loudon, John Claudius 244 Louis XIV 100, 335 Loveday, John 92, 93-94 Lowther Castle, Westmorland 59-60, 61-62 61, 63, 116, 167, 183-84, 380 (n. 20) Lowther family 47; Sir James Lowther afterwards (1784) Earl of Lonsdale n; Sir John Lowther 2nd Bt 116; see also Lonsdale, Earls of Loyd, Lewis 219 Loyd, Samuel Jones, see Overstone Lubbock, Jules, The Tyranny of Taste 361 Lumley, John 301 Lund, James 218 Lybbe Powys, Mrs Philip (nee Caroline Girle) 56, 192; house visits 28, 34, 40-41, 56, 57, 58, 81- 82, 92-93, 239, 241 Lydney Park, Glos. 216 Lyme Park, Ches. 95 Lynford Hall, Norf. 35-36, 63,
Mangall, Travis and 232 Mapperton, Dorset 166 marble 180 Marble Hill, Middx. 104 Marham House, Norf. 38 Marlborough, Charles Spencer, 3rd Duke of 55, 371 (n. 20) Marlborough, John Churchill, 1st Duke of 53 Marlborough, Sarah Churchill, Duchess of 116 Marsden, Elizabeth 381 (n. 24) Marsden, Rufus 150, 151, 159, 188, 192, 381 (n. 24) Marsden, Rufus Alexander 381 (n. 24) Marshall, John 399 (n. 100) masons 4, 162, 163, 165,166, 201; pay 159, 170,171, 173,174, 175, 237, 382 (n. 39), 383 (n. 65); Haveringland Hall 175, 252, 253, 385 (n. 98);
Henham Hall 174,384 (n. 94); see also stone materials 64-65, 217 Massie, Joseph 39 Lysons, Daniel and Samuel, materials, see building materials Mavor, William, The British survey 44 Lyttelton, Charles 47, 199, 208, Tourists travel guides 79-80, So, 82 390 (n. 4) May, Hugh 115 Lyttelton, Sir George Mayfair, London 18 Lyttelton, 1st Baron 89, 247 Mead, Dr Richard 105 McAdam, John Loudon 178 Melbury House, Dorset 92 Mackenzie, William Dalziel 219 Melton Constable, Norf. 34, Malham Tarn House, Yorks. 39, 367 (n. 12) 218 Mentmore Towers, Bucks. 141 Malpas, Lord 105 Mercier, Philip 17 Malsis House, Yorks. 218 Merevale Hall, War. 171 Malton, Thomas 265,315 Mereworth Castle, Kent 93 Manchester, Charles Montagu, Merton Hall, Norf. 36, 222-23, 4th Earl of 167, 199 223, 253, 349; see also Manchester, George Montagu, Walsingham, Barons Methuen, Sir Paul 105 4th Duke of 11, 92 Micklethwaite, Mr Nathaniel Manchester, William 240 Montagu, 2nd Duke of 18
420
Middlesex, Charles Sackville, Earl of 69 Middleton, Sir William 1st Bt 350-51 Middleton family 228, 405 (n. 112)
Mildmay, Benjamin, see Fitzwalter, Earl Military Inquiry, Commission of (1806-1807) 135-36 Millais, Sir John Everett, 1st Bt 10
Miller, Sanderson 47,119, 199, 237; Belhus, 277,360; Hagley Hall, 89, 90, 247 Milner, William 16, 45 Milner Field, Yorks. 219 Milnes, Pemberton 40 Milnes, Richard Slater 335-36 Milton House, Northants. 130, 148,166,179,190, 263 Modern Builder's Assistant, The 259
Molyneux-Montgomerie, Cecil 348 Monasteries, Dissolution of 362 Montagu, Dukes of 225, 392 (n. 43) Montagu, Sir Edward 392 (n. 43) Montagu, Mrs Elizabeth 102 Montagu, George (4th Duke of Manchester) 11, 92 Montagu House, London 101,101 Moor Park, Herts. 104, 243 Moore, Robert 261 Moritz, C. P. 47 Morris, Robert 243, 285, 328 Morris, Roger 72,110, i n , 118, 375 (n. 8) Mortimer Lodge, Berks. 259 Moulsham Hall, Essex 283, 397 (n. 76) Moyser, Col. James 109, 110-11, 243 Much Wenlock, Shrops. 240
CREATING
PARADISE
Mulgrave, Lord 68-69 Munich 350 Myers, George 141,141 Nabobs 44, 229 Nadauld (carver) 167 nails (building) 182, 195, 388 (n. 176) Napoleonic wars 19, 63, 363; see also French wars Narford Hall, Norf. 33, 86, 209, 373 (n. 37) Nash, John 136,137,176, 378 (n. 76), 379 (n. 7), 383 (n. 64) National Trust 32 navigations, see river navigations Neale, John Preston 57,122 Nedeham, James 380 (n. 10) Neeld, Joseph 42-43 Netherlands 66 Neve, Richard 280 Neville, Sylas 35, 281 "New Domesday Book" (Return of Owners of Land, 1873) 7, 18, 202-3, 231, 358-59; see also Bateman, John New Hall, Essex 40, 239 New River Company 217 Newby Hall, Yorks. 68 Newby Park, Yorks. 210, 211, 243; see also Baldersby Park Newcastle, Henry Pelham-Clinton Pelham, 5th Duke of (Lord Lincoln) 22,140 Newcastle, Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of 25-26, 52, 85 Newcastle corporation 86 Newdigate, Sir Roger, 3rd Bt 277 Newmarch, George 155-56 Newmarket, Suff. 22 Norfolk 32-40, 204-21 passim, 228 Norfolk, Dukes of 47, 89
Norfolk and Norwich Hospital 234
Normanby, Lord 145 Normanhurst, Sussex 218 Norris, Richard 259, 279, 397 (n. 67) North Elmham, Norf. 209, 254 North, Roger 40, 124; Of Building: Roger North's Writings on Architecture 52; his observations 40, 53,116, 126,147, 187, 269, 280 North Glass Company 193 Northamptonshire 34, 204-27 passim Northern Architectural Association 133 Northumberland, Dukes of 16, 24-25; Sir Algernon Percy, 4th Duke of 137-38, 171-72 Northumberland House, London 101, 102 Norwegian timber 180, 192; see also timber Norwich, Bishop of 86, 199 Norwich Cathedral 341 Norwich Mercury 36 Norwich Union Fire Insurance Office 286, 288 Nostell Priory, Yorks. 40, i n , 112, 150, 215
Nottingham, Daniel Finch, 2nd Earl of 116, 145, 165, 180, 189,195-96, 300-302, 399 (n. 6); see also Burley-on-the-Hill; Winchilsea, Earls of Nottingham, Heneage Finch, 1st Earl of 300 Nun Appleton estate, Yorks. 45 O'Brien, Henry 129-30 Office of Works 118-19,127, 135-36, 154-55, (n. 13); architects from 4, 53, 118-19, 127, 201; see also public works
INDEX Oglander, Sir William 5th Bt 172, 383 (n. 64); see also Parnham Oliver (Wrest clerk of the works) 379 (n. 82) Orchardleigh Park, Som. 141, 143, 263, 328-30, 349, 402 (n. 65); 161, 183, 328
Orford, Earls of, see Walpole Ormesby Hall, Yorks. in, 243, 246
Orrell, Alfred 231-32 Orwell, Lady 335 Orwell Park, Suff. 27, 368 (n. 37) Osborne, James 383 (n. 65) Osborne House, IoW 140 Ossington, Notts. 170 Oulton Park, Ches. 190, 218, 381 (n. 32), 382 (n. 41)
Overstone, Samuel Jones Loyd, 1st Baron 44 Overstone Hall, Northants. 143-44, H4, 2.18, 227
Oxford, Edward Harley, 2nd Earl of 85-88, 85; country house tours 40, 83-84, 86-88, 92, 239, 241, 275 Oxford, Henrietta Cavendish, Countess of 85, 383 (n. 65) Pace, Richard and son 230 Paddockhurst, Sussex 141 Page, Sir Gregory 2nd Bt 104, 105
Paine, James in, 125, 133, 169, 200, 213, 215, 265; Cusworth Hall 256, 263, 264-65, 265, 266; Felbrigg Hall 75-76, 76, 77; Nostell Priory in, 112, 150, 215; patronage 119, 124, 177; Thorp Arch Hall 112, 112, 113 painters 162, 163, 197, 238, 252, 385 (n. 104); see also artist-craftsmen; decoration
421
Pennyman family i n Pepys, Samuel 52, 303 Perritt, Thomas 169 Peterborough, Charles Mordaunt, 3rd Earl of 388 114, 115, 117,117, 118, 234, 270, (n. 176) 376 (n. 15), 397 (n. 77) Peto, Samuel Morton 219 Palmer, Sir John, 5th Bt 164, 215 Petre, John Berney 37, 287 Petty, Sir William 257; see also Palmerston, Henry Temple, Shelburne 2nd Viscount 350 Petworth House, Sussex 18, Panshanger, Herts. 243 Paris 66 47, 59, 141 Pevsner, Sir Nikolaus Parker, Thomas 244, 244 Parliament 14-15, 44, 59, 100, Bernhard, The Buildings of England series 2, 3, 237, 344, 201, 225, 359 Parnham, Dorset 165, 170-71, 361, 362 Phipson, R. M. 217 172, 175, 176, 383 (n. 64), 385 Phoenix insurance company (n. 104) 288 Parsons, William 127 Pickford, Joseph 132 Parys Mountain mines 97 Piper, Messrs Thomas and Patrick, Dr Simon 208-9 William 141 Paty family 229 Paxton, Sir Joseph 141, 195 Plas Newydd, Anglesey 189 Payne, Rene 391 (n. 16) plaster 180, 182 Payne-Gallway, Stephen 69 plasterers 4, 162, 163, 169, 175; Peach, Martha 176 pay 174, 175, 238, 265, 326, Peach, Stephen 170 382 (n. 39 and 41); Peak District 82 Haveringland Hall 252, 382 Peake, Robert 114 (n. 39), 385 (n. 98) Peel, Col. & Lady Alice 350-51 Platt, George 256, 264, 26$ Peirse, Henry 69 Plaw, John 212 Pelham, Charles (Anderson) Plumb, Sir John H., The 188 Pursuit of Happiness: A View Pelham, Henry 15 of Life in Georgian England 18 plumbers 162, 163, 175, 184, 193, Pellegrini, Giovanni Antonio 252 48, 167 Pocklington Canal 266 Pell Wall House, Shrops. 122, poor law relief 126 263, 378 (n. 76) Popplewell, Samuel 380 (n. 20) Pembroke, Henry Herbert, Portland, William John 9th Earl of 72, 84, 104, 105, Cavendish Bentick-Scott, 116, 118, 375 (n. 8) Pembroke, Philip Herbert, 4th 5th Duke of 161 Portsmouth, Elizabeth, Earl of 115 Countess of 309-10; see also Pendleton, Revd Jeremiah 148 Griffin Pennines 80 Postle family 39 Pennoyre, Brecknockshire 348
Palladianism 34, 62, 67, 72, 79, 92, 104, 117-18, 357; see also architects; Burlington Palladio, Andrea xv, 93; I Quattro libri Dell'Architettura
422
Poussin, Gaspard 97 Poussin, Nicolas 97, 355 Povey, John 127 Povey, Thomas 303 Powis, Lady 28 Powis Castle, Montgomeryshire 95, 96, 271 Powys, Mrs Philip Lybbe, see Lybbe Powys Pratt, Edward 122, 276; see also Ryston Hall Pratt, Sir George 115 Pratt, Sir Roger 37, 115, 226, 227, 256, 276; building advice 126, 147, 266-67, 269, 270-71, 280; see also Horseheath Hall Preston family 391 (n. 25) Pretyman, George 27 Price, Francis, Treatise on Carpentry 118 Prideaux, Edmund 33 Prideaux, Humphrey 372 (n. 33) Prince Regent, see George, Prince Regent Prince's Lodging House, Newmarket, Suff. 226 Prior Park, Som. 32 Pritchard, Thomas 131, 268, 275, 275 Proctor, George 35; see also Beauchamp-Proctor Prowse, Thomas 247, 256 public works 126, 134, 136-37, 165; see also Office of Works publications, see literature Pugin, August Welby Northmore 141, 232 Pym family 95
CREATING PARADISE Quidenham, Norf. 37, 367 (n. 12) Raby Castle, Dur. 60 Radcliffe, Sir Joseph 3rd Bt 30 Radley House, Berks. 130-31 Ragley Hall, War. 116 railways 100, 163, 166, 179-80, 181, 217, 346; see also carriage Ramsden, Sir John William 5th Bt 21, 22, 28 Ramsey Abbey, Hunts. 249, 251, 254, 321, 382 (n. 39); see also Fellowes, Edward; Haveringland Raveningham Hall, Norf. 57 Rawlins, Thomas 57, j8, 243, 403 (n. 71) Raynham Hall, Norf. 34, 87, 87, 150, 313 Rebecca, Biagio 167, 323 Reed, William 331 Rendcomb Park, Glos. 216 Rendlesham, Frederick William Brook Thellusson, 5th Baron 217-18, 330 Rendlesham Hall, Suff. 217-18, 397 (n. 67) Repton, Humphry 8, 39, 153, 159, 230, 281, 320;
Sheringham Hall 39, 153-54, 1J4, 2.56 Repton, John Adey 154, 256 Return of Owners of Land, 1873, see "New Domesday Book" Revesby Abbey, Lines. 95, 271 Reynolds, Sir Joshua 68, 69, 12% 323
Rhodes, Robert 238 Ricci, Marco 48, 167 quantity surveyors 126, 134, Richards (plasterers) 385 (n. 98) 136, 260 Queen's House, Greenwich 114 Richardson, George 107, 285, Queensbury, Charles Douglas, 375 (n. 72), 396 (n. 57) Richardson, Jonathan 85 3rd Duke of 84 Richmond, Charles Lennox, Querns, The, Cirencester, 3rd Duke of 26, 281 Glos. 230
Rickman, Thomas 80 Riddlesworth Hall, Norf. 391 (n. 25) Rigaud, Jacques 106 Rigby, James 382 (n. 41) Rigg, William 238 Ripley, Thomas 118, 127, 149-50, 149; Blatherwyke Hall 129, 129; Houghton Hall 149-50; Raynham Hall 150, 313; Wolterton Hall 150, 173, 183
Ripley Castle, Yorks. 188, 350 Ripon Palace, Yorks. 268 Risley, Bartholomew 130-31 river navigations 25, 41, 266, 335; movement of materials 178, 179, 180, 182, 190, 191, 253; see also canals; carriage; sea freight roads 25, 34, 58-60, 86, 100, 178-79, 357; carriers 178, 178, 181, 182; macadamizing 178 Robbins, William 384 (n. 85) Roberts, John 155 Roberts, William 173,174 Robinson, Dr John 192 Robinson, Sir Thomas, 1st Bt 29,30, 72, 131, 275; Castle Howard 29, 306; Clay don House 24, 24; Rokeby Park 2-9, 31
Robinson, Sir William 1st Bt 210, 243
Rockingham, Charles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of 40, 200, 371 (n. 19); see also Wentworth Woodhouse Rockingham-Fitzwilliam dynasty 18, 324 Rokeby Park, Yorks. 29,31; see also Robinson, Sir Thomas Rolfe, Dorothy 107 Rolfe, Edmund 11-12,13, 77-79, 340-43; Grand Tour 70, 77,
INDEX 78-79; Heacham matters, see Heacham Hall Rolfe, Edmund senior 340-41 Rome, see Grand Tour Romney, George 318 ropes 238 Rosa, Salvator 97 Rose family 177; Joseph Rose 169, 265, 314, 33i Rose, Robert 162 Rothschild family 101, 141; Baron Mayer Amschel de 141 Rous, Sir John, 6th Bt 120, 126-27, 224» 3!9-2o, 321-22; for Henham matters, see Henham Hall; Marsden, Rufus; Wyatt, James Rowley, Admiral Sir Joshua ist Bt 259; see also Tendring Hall Roxburgh, John Ker, 3rd Duke of 78 Royal Academy 68, 124, 240 Royal Commission on Historical Monuments of England (RCHME) 203, 222 Royal Exchange insurance company 286, 287 Royal Institute of British Architects, see Institute of British Architects Royal Mews, London 136 Rudding Park, Yorks. 30 Rundell, Philip 42 Rushbrooke Hall, Suff. 350 Russell, James 67 Russell, John Russell, ist Earl 140 Rutland, John Henry Manners, 5th Duke of 60 Rutter, John 241 Ryston Hall, Norf. 37, 122, 256, 276, 276, 290, 292 Sackville-West, Victoria Mary (Vita), English Country Houses 1, 12
Sadborrow House, Dorset 395 (n. 30) St Ives, Bingley, Yorks. 215 St Martins-in-the-Field, London 105 Salisbury, Robert A. T. Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of 31 Salle Park, Norf. 39, 243, 369 (n.62) Salmon, William, Palladio Londiniensis 118 Salt, Titus Sir, ist Bt 219 Salvin, Anthony 137, 141, 246, 268; Anthony Salvin ... (Allibone) 246; Alnwick Castle 137- 38; Dunster Castle 141; Harlaxton Manor 137; High House, Campsea Ashe 217; Paddockhurst 141; Pennoyre 348; Petworth House 141; remodelling houses 246, 273, 396 (n. 56); Ripon Castle 268; Sherborne House 156; Thoresby Hall 141, 349 Samwell, William 115 sand (building) 181, 186, 193 Sandon Hall, Staffs. 140 Sandringham House, Norf. 36,
423 sea freight 107, 179, 180-81, 182, 190-91, 191-92,193; Caen stone 388 (n. 170); coastal duty 308, 388 (n. 175); cost of 181, 190, 191, 253, 388 (n. 176), 395 (n. 29); see also canals; carriage; river navigations Sedbury Park, Glos. 229 Sedgeford Hall, Norf. 343 Selwin, Charles 237 Sennowe Park, Norf. 36 Serlio, Sebastiano 114, 115, 270 servants 25, 52, 54, 63, 360, 371 (n. 19); as tour guides 81, 82 Settle, John 152 Sezincote, Glos. 229 Shabden Park, Surrey 141 Shadwell Lodge (Park), Norf. 35, 116, 147-48, 170, 283, 382 (n. 39); see also Buxton Shambellie, Kirkcudbrightshire
394 (n. 19) Sharman, John 130 Sheeres, Sir Henry 390 (n. 199) Shelburne, William Petty, 2nd Earl of 18, 270 Shelburne House, London 101 Shepherd, Edward 40 Sheppard, John 217 Sherard family 274 63, 217 Sherborne, John Dutton, 2nd Sandys, Francis 212 Baron: Sherborne House, Sandywell Park, Glos. 209 Glos. 155-56, IJJ, 159, 263, Saumarez, Barons de 405 (n. 112) 272, 279, 381 (n. 32) sawyers 163, 252 Sheringham Hall, Norf. 39, scaffolders 171 153-54, 154, 256, 257, 290, 292, Scamozzi, Vincenzo 114, 115 347 Scarsdale, Nathaniel Curzon, Shipton Hall, Shrops. 275 ist Baron 92, 297; see also Shotesham Park, Norf. 37, Kedleston Hall 233-36, 235, 257, 263-64, Scotland 80, 82; Scottish peers 287-88; see also Fellowes, 15, 18, 19 Robert Scott, George Gilbert 194,194, Shrewsbury, Lady 373 (n. 49) 226,348 Shrewsbury, Earl of 231 Scott, Sir Walter, ist Bt 79 Shrubland Park, Suff. 213, 228, Scottow Hall, Norf. 27-28, 57 350, 405 (n. 112)
424 Sillitoe, Purney 122, 378 (n. 76) Simmons, Jack, "Georgian Somerset" 32 Simond, Louis 108 Simpson, Thomas 170 Singh, Maharajah Duleep 63 skilled tradesmen 118, 159, 177; for art skills, see artist-craftsmen; imported skills 166, 169, 184, 191, 257, 356; London craftsmen 104, 106; materials 184, 191, 388 (n. 176); see also workforces; and individual trades Skirrow, Wilfred 238 slate 184, 386 (n. 120), 388 (n. 176); carriage 178, 180, 182, 386 (n. 120), 388 (n. 176); Westmorland slate 191 slaters 176,191, 237, 238, 252, 388 (n. 176) Sledmere House, Yorks. 290, 292, 313-19, 3H, 315, 347, 37i (n. 19); see also Sykes family Sloane, Sir Hans 105 Sloley Hall, Norf. 39, 40 Smallburgh Hall, Norf. 39 Smirke, Sir Robert 8, 61, 137,
CREATING
PARADISE
gentlemen builders 109, 257; architects' duties 124,136, 144; Dunninald House 263; Gunthorpe Hall 257; Honing Hall 38; Letton Hall 37; Pell Wall House 122, 263, 378 (n. 76); Ramsey Abbey 249; Rendlesham Hall 397 (n. 67); Ryston Hall 37, 122, 276, 276; Shotesham Park 37, 233, 235, 257, 263-64; Sulby Hall 391 (n. 16); Tendring Hall 258, 259, 260, 263, 269, 393 (n. 5) Society of Dilettanti 68-70, 69,
Stafford House, London 61, 102,103
Stanford Hall, Leics. 274-75, 274, 396 (n. 58) Stanhoe Hall, Norf. 39 Stanley, Charles 35 Stanley, Sir William 391 (n. 24) Stanley stonemasons 385 (n. 98) Stapleford Park, Leics. 274, 396
(n.57) Staunton Harold Hall, Leics. 95 Staveley, Christopher 274, 396 (n.57) Steele, Sir Richard 234 268; see also Grand Tour Stephens, Lyne 35, 217; see also Somerleyton Hall, Suff. 219 Lynford Hall Somerset, Algernon Seymour, Stevenson, J.J. 217 7th Duke of 16 Steward, James 192 Somerset, Charles Seymour, Stewart, William 394 (n. 19) 6th Duke of 105 Stockeld Park, Yorks. 215 Sondes, George John Milles, Stoke Hall, Derby. 155 4th Baron 254 Stoke Rochford, Lines. 63 South Pickenham Hall, Norf. Stone, Lawrence and Jeanne C. Fawtier, An Open Elite? 38 England, 1540-1880 285, South Sea speculation 210, 233, 362-63, 366 (n. 13) 308, 365 (n. 5) Southampton, Charles Fitzroy stone materials 178, 184, 186, 189-91, 388 (n. 174), 395 3rd Baron 218 381 (n. 32) Southill Park, Beds. 42, 42, 59, (n. 29); Bath stone 181, 190, Smith, Adam 43 153, 220, 220, 297, 324; see also 191, 250, 252, 253; Caen stone Smith, Charles Saumarez 47 Byng; Whitbread 388 (n. 170); drying out Smith, Francis 118, 131-32, 261, Southwell, Edward 209, 229 process 195-96; East Anglia 274-75, 274 Southwell, Sir Robert 303 166, 203, 383 (n. 66); Ketton Smith, George 141 specialist craftsmen, see artiststone 189, 190, 388 (n. 171); Smith, John 273-74 craftsmen; skilled tradesmen movement of 178, 179, 180, Smith, Sydney 244-45 Spectator, The 234 181, 182, 190-91, 386 (n. 120), Smith, William (Leeds) 192 388 (n. 170); Portland stone Smith, William (Midlands) 118, Spencer family 227, 391 (n. 16) Spencer-Stanhope, Walter 69, 69 180, 182, 190, 326, 388 (n. 170 131, 274, 274 Sprowston Hall, Norf. 217 and 175); reused materials Smith, William junior 131 185; see also masons smiths 162, 195, 252, 389 (n. 196) Stafford, Sir George William Stafford Jerningham, 8th Stonehouse, John 130-31 Smyth, John 69, 69, 78; see also Baron 35 Stoneleigh Abbey, War. Heath Hall Stafford, William 261-63, 262 Snell, Jonathan 384 (n. 85) Stafford-Howard, 2nd Earl stonemasons, see masons Soane, Sir John 68, 122-23, 123, of 105 Stourhead, Wilts. 97 124, 248, 270; advice to
425
INDEX Summerson, Sir John: Architecture in Britain 131; Georgian London 102-4; "The Stowe House, Bucks. 24 Classical Country House in Stowlangtoft Hall, Suff. 146, Eighteenth Century 180, 217 England" 2-3, 201, 362, 390 Stradbroke, Earl of, see Rous, (n.8) Sir John Stradsett Hall, Norf. 38-39, 333 Sun Fire Office 286, 287, 288 surveyors, see quantity Strafford, Earl of 200 surveyors Strawberry Hill, Middx. 91, Sussex, Augustus Frederick, 276, 277; see also Walpole, Duke of 60 Horace Strelley Hall, Notts. 132, 183, Sutherland, George Granville Leveson- Gower, 2nd Duke 269, 343-45, 344, 345, 404 of 16, 61,102,103, 268-69, (n. 95) 298,357-58 Strickland, Sir William 4th Bt Sutherland, Harriet Elizabeth 131 Georgiana Leveson-Gower, Stroud Valley textiles 229-30 Duchess of 16, 61,102,103, Strutt, John 403 (n. 71) 249, 268-69, 357-58 Stuart, James 102 stuccoists 48, 167, 261, 262, 277; Sutherland-Gower, Ronald Charles (son) 358 see also artist-craftsmen Swanbourne, Bucks. 180 Studley Royal, Yorks. 84, 86, Swedish timber 192; see also 97, 210, 339 timber Stukeley, William 84 Sudeley, Charles Douglas Switzerland 66 Richard Hanbury-Tracy, 4th Sykes family 24-25, 28, 401 (n. 30); Sir Christopher Baron 137 Sykes, 2nd Bt 269, 313-19, Sudeley, Charles 318, 322, 349, 401 (n. 31); Hanbury-Tracy, ist Baron Lady Sykes 317,318; Revd 137 Sir Mark Sykes, ist Bt 314, Suffield, Sir Harbord, ist Baron 35, 367 (n. 12) 317, 322; see also Sledmere Suffolk 204-21 passim, 227-28 House Suffolk, Charles Brandon, ist Syon House, Middx. 104 Duke of 319 Syston Park, Glos. 197, 390 Suffolk, Earls of 349; James (n. 202) Howard, 3rd Earl 309; Talman, William 116, 127-28, Henry Howard, 10th Earl 309; see also Audley End; 128, 148, 304, 349 Howard de Walden barony Tatham, Charles 306 Suffolk, Henrietta Howard, Tatler, The 234 Countess of 104 Tatton Park, Ches. 391 (n. 24) Suffolk Fire Office 286, 288 Taverham Hall, Norf. 217 Sulby Hall, Northants. 391 taxation 15, 322-23, 350; brick (n. 16) duty 388 (n. 165), 395 (n. 29); Stow Bardolph Hall, Norf. 30, 217, 391 (n. 25)
coastal duty 308, 388 (n. 175); glass duty 194; inhabited house duty 398 (n. 95); land tax 15, 316; window tax 398 (n. 95); see also building costs; financial resources Taylor, John 396 (n. 58) Taylor, Sir Robert 53, 69, 69, 119, 214, 278, 281, 371 (n. 18)
Temple, Richard Grenville-Temple, ist Earl 70 Temple Newsam, Yorks. 16, 17, 288
Tendring Hall, Suff. 258, 259, 260, 263, 269, 287, 288, 393 (n.5) Terling Place, Essex 395 (n. 30), 403 (n. 71) Teulon, Samuel S. 35, 143 Teulon, W. M. 143-44, H4 textile industry 229-30, 293, 294, 356, 399 (n. 100)
Thellusson, Charles Sabine Augustus 218, 330-33,330, 402 (n. 67); see also Brodsworth Hall Thellusson, Peter 217-18, 330, 332, 402 (n. 67)
Thomas, Samuel 382 (n. 38) Thompson, F. M. L., English Landed Society 7 Thompson, Richard 69, 69 Thompson, Stephen 109, IIO-II, 112, 160,
184,
375
(n. 8); see also Kirby Hall Thoresby Hall, Notts. 141, 241, 349 Thorney Abbey, Cambs. 226 Thornhill, Sir James 84, 167 Thornton, William 150 Thorp Arch Hall, Yorks. 112-14,112,113,184, 215, 243, 246, 375-76 (n. 15)
Tijou, Jean 167 tilers 162 tiles 181, 182
426 timber 94-95, 180, 182, 184, 186, 191-92, 238, 252; at Haveringland 252, 253; movement of 178, 179, 180,181, 182, 191-92; recycled materials 185 Tintern Abbey, Mon. 80, 97 Toddington Manor, Glos. 137, 378 (n. 78) Tofts, Norf. 217 Tomkins, William 311 Tomkinson, Edward 391 (n. 24) Tomline, Col. George 27, 368 (n.37) Tomline, Marmaduke 27 Tonington, Viscounts, see Byng tourists, see British Tour; Grand Tour; visitors Townsend, William 130-31 Townshend, Charles, 2nd Viscount 87, 313, 367 (n. 12) Townshend, Charles ist Lord Bayning 240 tradesmen, see skilled tradesmen; workforces; and individual skills tramping 166 transportation, see canals; carriage; railways; river navigations; roads; sea freight Travis and Mangall 232 Trentham Hall, Staffs. 61 Trevisani, Francesco 71 Trewithen, Cornwall 277-78 Trollope, George and Sons 141 Tunnicliffe, Ralph 200 Turner, Sir Edward 237 Turner, Joseph Mallord William 283, 284 turners 252 Tyne glass-manufacturing 193, 194
CREATING
PARADISE
upholstery 107, 162, 184, 197 urban rents 355 van der Mijn, Frans 30 Vanbrugh, Sir John 1, 49, 53, 89, 116, 118, 199; Castle Howard 48,168, 305, 306,307 Vanneck, Sir Gerard, 2nd Bt 81,120, 213, 281, 319; see also
Heveningham Hall Vassalli, Francesco 261 Vaughan-Watkins, Col. Lloyd 348 Veblen, Thorstein (Bunde), The Theory of the Leisure Class 240 Velde, Willem van de 76 Verney, Ralph, 2nd Earl 22-24, 29 Vernon, Lord 231 Verrio, Antonio 167 Vertue, George 85-86 Victoria, Queen 140 Victoria County Histories 203 Vienna 66 villas 8, 45, 104, 105, 357; architectural style 52, 53-54, 55, 273, 371 (n. 18); Newby Hall 210, 211; see also Palladio Villiers, Lord 56 Vincent, Henry 40, 44-45, 369 (n. 64) visitors 9, 34, 51, 63, 79-108, 357; servant guides 81, 82; travel guides 79-80, 80, 82, 96; see also British Tour; Grand Tour; individual visitors indexed separately Vitruvius Pollio, Marcus 114 Vries, Vredeman de 114
Wale, Samuel 265 Wales 82 Wales, Prince of (Edward VII) 63, 217
Walford, E., The County Families of the United Kingdom 5, 50-51, 366 (n. 12) Walkers of Manchester 142 Wallace, Sir Richard, ist Bt 213 Waller, R.J. 171 Walmesley, George 231 Walpole, George 3rd Earl of Orford 22, 25, 78, 34i
Walpole, Horace 4th Earl of Orford 11, 25, 59, 69, 91, 92, 268, 339; Albyns 81; Belhus 277; Blenheim Palace 89-91; Castle Howard 47, 48-49; country house tours 89-92, 96, 100, 241, 271; Donington Hall 280, 397 (n. 71); Drayton House 92; Euston Hall 275; Horton House 280-81; Journals of Visits to Country Seats 89; Kedleston Hall 89, 92, 297; Melbury House 92; Woburn Abbey 280; Wrest Park 58-59, 271; see also Strawberry Hill Walpole, Horatio ist Baron Walpole of Wolterton, see Wolterton Hall Walpole, Sir Robert ist Earl of Orford 25, 105, 323, 340, 367 (n. 12); fruits of office 20, 34, 190, 209; Houghton matters, see Houghton Hall; Earl of Oxford and 87, 88; Thomas Ripley and 118, 149 Walsingham, Barons 367 (n. 12); Thomas de Grey, Wade, John, Black Book: or 2nd Baron 222-23; Thomas Corruption Unmasked 20 de Grey, 4th Baron 349; waggoners 181 Thomas de Grey, 5th Baron Upcher, Abbot 154, 256; see also Wake family 215 217; see also Merton Hall Sheringham Hall Wakefield Lodge, Northants. 227
427
INDEX Walter, John 138, 139, 143, 267, 293 Walter, John and William 142 Wanstead House, Essex 53,54, 95, 96, 104, 105 War of American Independence 19, 37, 78, 107, 234, 336, 342 Ware, Isaac 42, 53, 150, 270, 371 (n. 18); A Complete Body of Architecture 178; Palladio's Four Books of Architecture 234 Warmsworth, Yorks. 371 (n. 19) Warner, Revd Richard 239, 323-24 Warwick, Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of 300 Warwick Castle, War. 79 watchmen 181-83 Waterhouse, Alfred 11, 12, 12, 63, 241 waterways, see canals; river navigations Watkins, Charles 149, 170, 181 Watts, Hugh 293 Watts, Sir James 231-32 Webb, John no, 115, 119, 131, 325, 370 (n. 9) Webster, George 152, 256 Weddell, William 68 weeders 176 Welbeck Abbey, Notts. 85, 161, 383 (n. 65) Wellington, Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of 60 Wentworth, Sir William i n Wentworth Castle, Yorks. 200, 304 Wentworth Woodhouse, Yorks. 18, 40, 59-60, 161, 200, 200, 243, 371 (n. 19) Wenvoe Castle, Glam. 40, 41, 370 (n. 66) West, Benjamin 309 West, Philip 165, 170 West Harling, Norf. 209
West Indies 217, 322-23, 324, 325, 326, 327,330-31, 348 West Wretham Hall, Norf. 391 (n. 25) Westcott, Peter 176, 191 Westmacott, Richard 326-27 Westminster, Hugh Lupus Grosvenor, 1st Duke of 10, n-12,18, 61, 241; see also Eaton Hall Weston Longville Hall, Norf. 57-58, 58, 83, 333-34 Westonbirt House, Glos. 63, 161, 171, 216-17, 241, 246 Westrup, Miss 145 Westwick House, Norf. 37, 287 wheelwrights 252 Whitbread, Samuel junior 42, 43, !53, 324, 333; see also Southill Park Whitbread, Samuel senior 42, 297, 324 White Lodge, Richmond 104 whitesmiths 195 Whittlebury Lodge, Northants. 218 Whitton, Middx. 105 Wilbraham, George 391 (n. 24) Wilcox, Edward 127-28 Wilkins, William 281, 334 Wilkinson, Philip 185, 331, 331 William III 47, 53, 100, 300, 305, 335; Blathwayt and 127, 129, 149, 303, 304 William of Wykeham 146, 380 (n.9) Wilson, Henry 146, 180, 217 Wilson, Mathew 152,171,190,194 Wilton House, Wilts. 56, 81, 83, 84, 86, 115 Wimpole Hall, Cambs. 59, 84, 85, 88 Winchester, John Paulet, 14th Marquess of 18 Winchilsea, Earls of 60, 302; see also Nottingham, Earls of
Winckler, J. M. 33 Winde, William 115 Windham, Ashe 72-74, 372 (n. 33) Windham, William 70, 72-77, 77, 120, 272; see also Felbrigg Hall Windsor Castle, Berks. 60-61, 134, 160, 379 (n. 7) Winn, Sir Rowland 4th Bt 40, in,
112
Wisbech Castle, Cambs. 226 Witcombe Park, Glos. 209 Woburn Abbey, Beds. 18, 95, 226, 280 W o d e h o u s e , Sir A r m i n e , 5th Bt 191; see also Kimberley Hall W o l l a t o n Hall, N o t t s . 79, 81 W o l t e r t o n Hall, Norf. 34, 162, 173, 209, 254, 367 (n. 12), 390 (n. 5); chimney-pieces 173, 174, 174; T h o m a s Ripley a n d 150,173, 183; workforce 173-74, 176 w o m e n w o r k e r s 169, 176, 371 (n. 19), 381 (n. 24) W o o d , E d w a r d 184
Wood, John the younger 341 woodcarvers, see carvers Woodforde, Revd, James 57-58, 240, 333 Woodforde, Samuel 98 Woodward, Dr John 105 Woolcot, Uriah 153 Woolverstone Hall, Suff. 213 Wooton, John 36 workforces 4, 127,146, 160-77, 161, 255-57, 356; celebrations 158,170,171-72, 176, 384 (n. 92); discipline 146,158, 170-71, 384 (n. 85); East Carlton Hall 164-65,166; effects of French wars on 159, 165; farming calendar and 162,165,166,181;
428 Haveringland Hall 162-63, 164,165-66; Henham Hall 163-64,165-66; improvements in conditions 175; labour disputes 171; pay, see building costs; labourers; and individual skills; lodgings 166, 174,175, 176, 382 (n. 39); women workers 169, 176, 371 (n. 19), 381 (n. 24); see also artist-craftsmen; skilled tradesmen; and individual skills workhouses 126 Worksop Manor, Notts. 89 Worlingham Hall, Suff. 209 Worsley, Lanes. 61 Worsley, Thomas 336-40, 347, 380 (n. 13), 403 (n. 81); for Hovingham matters, see Hovingham Hall; his wife Elizabeth (nee Lister) 337 worsted industry 32 Wren, Sir Christopher 118, 124-25 Wrest Park, Beds. 58-59, 88,
CREATING
PARADISE
95, 272, 273-74, 2.-J3, 379 (n. 82), 396 (n. 55); 2nd Earl de Grey and 138, 271-72, 284, 379 (n. 82), 396 (n. 55); siting of 282, 284; see also Yorke, Philip Wright, Thomas 281 Wright, Richard 129-30 Wright, T. 8C G. 179-80 Wrightson, William 148, 264, 265, 269, 371 (n. 19); see also
Sherborne House 155-56,155, 159, 272, 381 (n. 32) Wyatt, Philip 348 Wyatt, Samuel 35, 98, 99,150, 214 Wyatt, Thomas H. 141, 143, 263, 329 Wyatville, Sir Jeffry 279 Wynne, Sir Watkin Williams, 4th Bt 69 Wynne House, London 101 Wynyard Park, Dur. 241
Cusworth Hall Wyatt, James 119, 120-22, 121, 159, 213, 214, 327, 376 (n. 38); Broke Hall 213, 279; Dodington Park 325-26,325, 327, 376 (n. 38); Fonthill Abbey 160-61, 239, 241; Gunton Hall 35; Henham Hall 120-22,122, 158, 159, 251, 256, 320; Sir John Rous and 120-21, 132, 190, 213; Heveningham Hall 120, 214, 281-82; Windsor Castle 160 Wyatt, Lewis 137,154-57, 25!> 314, 381 (n. 32), 382 (n. 41); Eaton-by-Congleton Hall 156-57, 1J7» 183, 278-79;
Yarborough family 24-25 Yeoman, Thomas 174 York, Frederick Augustus, Duke of 60 Yorke, Philip 2nd Earl of Hardwicke 53, 58-59, 83-84, 88-89, 96,104, 198; see also Grey, Marchioness; Wrest Park Yorkshire (West Riding) 205-21 passim Young, Arthur 236, 338, 341; General View of Agriculture in Suffolk 385 (n. 103) Zucchi, Antonio Pietro 167